Acharya Prashant explains that the sound of temple bells represents the unstruck sound, which captures the gross mind and leads it toward subtlety and silence. He clarifies that silence is not the opposite or absence of noise but a constant presence that exists alongside words. Similarly, the light of truth has no opposite like darkness. He defines a temple as a specific place where sounds, forms, and actions lead a person toward the formless and the dissolution of the doer. He warns against the premature claim that the whole world is a temple, noting that such a state is only reached when the mind itself becomes a temple. He further explains that no work is inherently superior or inferior; instead, the quality of work depends on the state of the mind. When one acts out of inner joy and love, the work is colored by that state, and eventually, the distinction between the doer and the deed vanishes, turning action into the dance of the soul.