Acharya Prashant explains that fear is a fundamental instinct that arises from a distance from the Truth. To preserve itself, fear employs hesitation as a tactic to avoid the Truth, often under the guise of waiting for complete certainty. He emphasizes that absolute clarity is unattainable in human form because the Truth is infinite and the human intellect is limited. Therefore, one must act with full honesty based on the current level of understanding rather than remaining stagnant. In spirituality, hesitation signifies contraction or smallness, whereas the Truth is vast and boundless. He advises that the purpose of life is to break one's self-imposed boundaries and identities, even if it causes pain, to attain Bliss, which is far superior to mere pleasure. Acharya Prashant further clarifies that attachment is a symptom of internal weakness rather than its cause. People seek attachments because they perceive themselves as small, incomplete, or helpless. True spiritual knowledge removes this sense of smallness, leading to a state of being beyond the compulsive need for company. He warns against creating or accepting dependency in relationships, as a dependent person eventually restricts the freedom of the one they rely upon. A genuine helper aims to make others independent so they no longer require external support. The ultimate goal is to reach a state of self-establishment where one is no longer driven by the desperate need for external validation or companionship.