Acharya Prashant explains that 'home' is where one truly is, while the 'outside' is merely where one thinks they are. He clarifies that one is always at home, but some people remain asleep and dream they are far away, even planning to move further away within those dreams. This home is the self, and it is impossible to be anywhere else; the perceived distance is only a lack of awareness. He emphasizes that the perception of 'many' people or things is a characteristic of a dream, as there is no multiplicity except in dreams. Regarding the people calling the protagonist home in Kahlil Gibran's 'The Prophet', Acharya Prashant describes them as manifestations of the source within the dream. These figures are not separate entities but represent a deep intimacy with one's own source and past. They call out in a way that has the power to break the dream and wake the individual up. He asserts that these voices are actually the protagonist's own deeper self calling out to his dreaming self, as the real self knows far more than the dreaming self. Finally, Acharya Prashant addresses the existence of illusion and ignorance within the context of one absolute truth. He explains that if truth is all-encompassing, then ignorance must be a part of it. He posits that ignorance is the ultimate freedom of truth. Truth is so absolutely free that it even possesses the freedom to be ignorant or to sleep. Just as one is free to wake up, one is also free to remain in a state of sleep and dreaming.