Acharya Prashant explains that common logic suggests one should desire rest and peace, but Rumi points toward a deeper dimension where one is already so fundamentally at rest that they can invite restlessness and turbulence. When a person desires with the hope of finding rest, they only encounter more restlessness. However, when one is secure and established in their own stillness, desire becomes a game or sport, and no peripheral trouble can harm their internal state. He emphasizes that desirelessness should be the starting point of action, not a distant goal to be reached through the bridge of desire. For the truly secure individual, the result of their actions is immaterial, allowing them to engage with the world without being affected by it. Using the metaphor of the sky, Acharya Prashant describes how the sky appears to change and take on colors, yet remains fundamentally unchangeable and still. Spirituality is not about avoiding the world or treating it like a diseased hospital; rather, it is about realizing a state of health that transcends worldly sickness. He illustrates this with a story of a student of the Buddha who lived with a courtesan. Because the monk was completely established in his own nature and offered no resistance to Maya, he remained untouched by her seductions. The monk's total lack of ego and attachment eventually exhausted the courtesan, proving that only one who is truly an ascetic can enter the world of desires and emerge unchanged.