Acharya Prashant explains that there are two types of answers to life's problems: one that is logical and neat but fails to bring actual change, and another that is profound and unreasonable to the ego. He notes that while people often understand concepts like fear and love intellectually, they remain weak and vulnerable when faced with real-life situations. This weakness persists as long as one relies solely on the mind and intellect. He emphasizes that human beings inherently seek consolation and support, which they often try to find in worldly relationships like that with a mother. However, physical relationships and material security have limitations and cannot provide ultimate peace or freedom from fear. He asserts that true stability and fearlessness come only through faith and surrender to the ultimate source, which he refers to as the 'Supreme Mother' or the 'Self'. While worldly mothers provide limited support, the Supreme Mother offers unconditional love and infinite security. To access this state, one must transcend the ego, which thrives on divisions of 'mine' and 'others'. Acharya Prashant highlights that the ego finds it easy to bow before personal relations but resists surrendering to the Divine because the Divine demands total innocence and the complete dissolution of cleverness. He concludes that by becoming like a child—innocent and without ego—one attains complete peace, joy, and a lightness of being, leaving all worries to the Supreme power.