Acharya Prashant addresses a questioner who feels worthless when trying to promote truth, as he sees an underlying egoistic desire for respect. The speaker explains that one should serve the truth precisely because one is a worthless person, as this is the only way to become worthy. He clarifies that one becomes worthy by committing to the right thing. The definition of worth or value is always in the context of the evaluator. The only real value addition is the elevation of consciousness, which can only be achieved through the pursuit of truth. Therefore, if one feels they are at a low point, it becomes even more important to chase the truth. The speaker elaborates that chasing the truth is not a treasure hunt but means identifying the false and having the courage to drop it. He refers to the Vedantic principle of 'Neti Neti' (negation), explaining that chasing the truth means not chasing the false. Falseness is defined as that which is not what it appears to be. This falseness does not lie in the object itself but in the perceiver. Using the example of mistaking a pen for a rocket launcher, he illustrates that the falseness is in the thought, driven by the perceiver's desires. It is this desire-driven perceiver that must be dropped, not the external objects or people. Acharya Prashant further explains that our desires skew our vision, causing us to project meanings onto things and people that are not inherent to them. For instance, one might project the image of a 'divine fairy' onto the girl next door due to a deep-seated desire. When these self-created castles in the air collapse, we blame the world. The meanings we assign to things arise from our own desirous state. When these desires are unfulfilled, we blame the objects, even though they never promised to fulfill them. The solution is to know things for what they really are. When one does this, both attachment and aversion drop away. Dropping the false is not about breaking relationships or discarding things, but about dropping the one within who cannot see the reality of things.