Acharya Prashant explains that identifying one's tendencies requires honesty rather than just attention. While tendencies are often obvious to others, an individual may remain blind to them due to a form of internal dishonesty. He argues that tendencies are not hidden; they are constantly manifesting in one's actions. The real issue is the mind's training to find certain things important. When the mind is conditioned to value trivial things, it remains trapped in them. He emphasizes that the only way to change this is through reading and satsang, which reorient the mind's sense of what is truly significant. Using the analogy of a film, Acharya Prashant describes how a person who has gained higher understanding becomes indifferent to superficial entertainment. If the mind no longer finds value in the drama, emotions, or provocations presented by society or media, it becomes free. He defines liberation as the removal of the 'hooks' within oneself. When these internal hooks are gone, external influences and societal pressures can no longer pull or control the individual. True change is not about fighting external forces but about a transformation of the mind where certain worldly attractions simply cease to appear meaningful. He further discusses how society fears this transformation because it is irreversible. Once an individual tastes a higher truth, they can never return to their old conditioned ways. This creates anxiety in families and society, who try to pull the person back through various means. Acharya Prashant suggests that even the resistance or disturbance from family members often stems from a hidden desire to be included in that higher experience, though they cannot admit it due to ego. Ultimately, he asserts that returning to the source is one's destiny, and true love lies in bringing others along toward that liberation.