Acharya Prashant explains that strength is not something to be actively cultivated or imported, as it is the innate nature and purity of one's being. He posits that individuals are already strong but have covered themselves with weakness learned from external sources. Therefore, the process of becoming strong is actually an unlearning of weakness. He describes true strength as a quiet ease or sahajata that manifests when facing challenges, rather than a showy or comparative capacity to fulfill desires. He advises that one must investigate how weakness operates in daily life and identify the 'trespassers'—random societal forces, biochemical impulses, and conditioning—that leave garbage within the mind. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that anything not original to the individual is a form of weakness. He warns that weakness is often injected under the guise of care, love, or success, such as when one's worth is tied to a job package or physical beauty. He suggests a two-step approach to reclaiming inner strength: first, stopping the intake of toxic external influences (neti neti), and second, seeking rare, high-quality external sources, like Vedantic wisdom, that help remove pre-accumulated weakness. He notes that people often resist acknowledging their inherent strength because it brings a heavy burden of responsibility. To awaken this latent strength, Acharya Prashant encourages challenging one's fears directly. He compares this to running with a competitor; the presence of a challenger forces one's potential to emerge. He urges students to observe the world with critical attention, noticing how economic systems, media, and advertisements intentionally induce insecurity and greed to turn individuals into consumers. By understanding these 'money trails' and the mechanics of social conditioning, one can prevent external forces from colonizing the mind. Ultimately, he asserts that while fears are external and accumulated over time, the internal core is infinitely more powerful and must be uncovered by discarding fickle attachments and dependencies.