Acharya Prashant addresses the confusion regarding the behavior of realized beings like Lalla, who may appear lost, sad, or ordinary. He explains that a surrendered mind is not a mind that has stopped functioning or wandering; rather, it is a mind that remains in peace despite changing states. Realization does not alter the physical brain or the mental apparatus, nor does it result in a constant ideal state. Instead, it allows for the full range of human emotions and experiences—happiness, sadness, anger, and fatigue—while maintaining an untouched internal stillness. This is the play of life, where the master continues to perform ordinary tasks like chopping wood and selling it, yet everything has fundamentally changed on a subtle, internal level. The speaker emphasizes that the primary obstacle to understanding realization is the collection of images and patterns people carry. People often expect enlightened individuals to possess halos, perform miracles, or exhibit extraordinary physical traits. Acharya Prashant argues that realization actually makes a person more ordinary, to the point of being unnoticeable. He critiques religious traditions that attempt to define holiness through specific signs, formulas, or the claim that no more prophets will come. He asserts that existence does not conform to human expectations or images. If the words or actions of a saint like Lalla clash with one's preconceived notions, it is the images that are false, not the saint. True holiness is found in ordinariness and being exactly what one is, without the need for special displays.