Acharya Prashant explains that the practice of 'Neti Neti' (not this, not this) is not about rejecting objects or the world as false, but about removing one's own falseness. He clarifies that an restless and incomplete consciousness seeks peace in external things, and 'Neti Neti' is the realization that the peace one seeks cannot be found in those objects. It is a process of freeing oneself from false expectations and futile efforts, like digging for water in a desert. Only when the inner restlessness is resolved and one becomes truly peaceful can they see the world as a play or as an expression of the divine, without any demands or fears. Claiming to see the divine everywhere while remaining restless within is described as hypocrisy. Regarding the concept of the soul, Acharya Prashant clarifies that the soul does not migrate from one body to another. He emphasizes that according to the Upanishads, the soul is one and identical with Brahman. It is the infinite ocean from which individual beings arise like waves and eventually dissolve back into. There are no multiple souls; there is only one Soul, and the idea of individual souls moving between bodies is a misunderstanding of Shri Krishna's teachings in the Bhagavad Gita. The soul is the light or space in which bodies appear and disappear. On the topic of hard work and conviction, he teaches that one's efforts should stem from their deepest convictions, which at the most profound level is faith. He advises against rationalizing improper actions or giving excuses for untruthfulness. Once something is recognized as right or true, one should be unconditionally committed to it without 'ifs' and 'buts'. Living truthfully means not indulging in what one knows to be fake and being fully sold out to what is relatively right compared to other things.