Acharya Prashant explains that every individual possesses two internal personas: the real self and the fake self. While they may appear identical, the fake self lacks originality and merely reflects what it acquires from external sources. It is capable of speaking and offering advice, much like a puppet or a machine, but it retreats when faced with the actual facts and challenges of life. The real self only finds space to emerge when an individual becomes deeply dissatisfied with their own hypocrisy and cowardice. He emphasizes that until a person reaches a point of internal exhaustion with their own duplicity, they will continue to live a superficial life. Regarding the difficulty of implementing changes due to social, familial, or economic pressures, he asserts that the world will inevitably present obstacles. Change does not occur through mere explanation or external inspiration; it happens only when an individual reaches a personal breaking point where they decide they can no longer tolerate their current state. This internal shift is spontaneous and cannot be forced, similar to the nature of love or rebellion. If a person is willing to be stopped by circumstances, they will remain stationary, as no amount of teaching can substitute for the internal will to change. He further notes that many people continue to live wrongly even while acknowledging their mistakes, often claiming they are helpless against circumstances. True transformation occurs when a person stops making excuses about the future or consequences and chooses to act with integrity. This involves standing up not just against the external world, but against one's own internal deceits and failures. The moment of change arrives when the individual refuses to continue a path they know to be wrong, regardless of the perceived risks or the lack of a guaranteed outcome.