Acharya Prashant explains that there is no specific point at which one can say they have become liberated. One must continuously maintain alertness because you are always carrying your enemy with you. For someone who has to live and die with their enemy, they can never be inattentive. The speaker then breaks down the word 'Saavdhan' (cautious) into 'Sa-Avdhan', where 'Avdhan' means attention or observation, which is meditation itself. Therefore, being cautious means to be in a state of meditation. The need for caution implies the presence of an enemy. This enemy, which is always with us, is the body, the ego. Maya resides within it. As long as this body exists, there cannot be complete liberation. However, one can shape the mind in such a way that it remains in complete awareness. This is a very subtle point. One does not achieve complete liberation, but through love and spiritual practice, the mind can be trained to be constantly aware. The enemy has not gone away; it is still right here. But now, awareness has become your deep habit. You live with awareness, you sleep with awareness, you walk and stop with awareness. This awareness is also called love. The enemy is still present, but you are now constantly and completely aware. 'Satat' means continuous, and 'Samagra' means total awareness from all sides. Liberation is not something you can abandon after achieving it. The meaning of liberation is that awareness has become your nature. But one must still remember that Maya can strike. If you don't remember this, your awareness has already fallen. To be continuously aware means to constantly know that the need for awareness is still there. There is no point at which you can say, 'I am done, and I don't need any more awareness.' As long as the body exists, Maya exists. Liberation is a continuous process, not a point. The goal is not to attain truth but to dissolve the ego. The final remnant of the ego remains as long as the body does. However, one can be 'Sa-Avdhan' (with attention), which is called being liberated while living (Jivanmukti). You are liberated, but with awareness. This applies even to the so-called liberated beings; if caution is lost, the fall is certain.