Acharya Prashant addresses the human tendency to desire both peace and turmoil. He proposes a criterion or a test: if you find both peace and turmoil appealing, then this message is for you. He suggests an experiment: try to spend a hundred lifetimes with turmoil. Take as many vows as you want, but you will find that a very deep and old corner of your mind will still hold peace dear. You will never be able to maintain complete loyalty to turmoil. This is because peace is your inherent nature, not turmoil. Even after a hundred lifetimes with turmoil, you will find that you are still attracted to peace, even if just a little. This is because peace is your nature. Conversely, if you spend time with peace, your connection with turmoil will completely break because that relationship was always based on a weak foundation. Even a thousand eons spent with turmoil cannot completely nullify your attraction to peace, though it can diminish it. You can forget the divine, but you can never forget it completely. The relationship is unbreakable. This is why the divine gives you complete freedom to wander, because it is confident that you will return. The relationship is firm. On the other hand, whatever binds you will always be afraid because it knows the bond is weak. It will always keep an eye on you, fearing you might run away. The moment it sees you with an Upanishad, it will go mad, knowing you will renounce everything false. Acharya Prashant explains that the world trembles and becomes agitated when someone walks towards truth. This is because the world knows that if you get even a little closer to truth, you will abandon all that is false. The world knows its foundation is false. This is the difference between the two. Peace is not afraid, but turmoil is. Peace can remain even in the midst of turmoil. However, if you touch turmoil with peace, the turmoil dies. Turmoil is mortal; it is false, so it must die. That is why it is always anxious and lives in fear. Peace is eternal and immortal, so it calmly witnesses and endures turmoil. Where there is fear, there is falsehood.