Acharya Prashant explains that Shri Krishna does not intervene in a person's life without their explicit permission. Transformation is a profound process, akin to death, which requires an individual to voluntarily surrender their ego, shame, and past identities. Shri Krishna acts like a flute player who calls out, but the choice to approach him lies entirely with the individual. Once a person enters his presence, they grant him the right to completely dismantle their old self. This surrender must be a conscious act of the will, where one repeatedly prays for liberation from the intellect, memory, and personality. Shri Krishna only touches those who are pure and ready to be dissolved in love; those filled with cleverness or doubt find him distant. The speaker clarifies that the ego's only righteous action is 'Yagya', which means self-sacrifice or total surrender. Life is provided specifically so that it can be offered back to the source. While humans possess free will, its highest and only true purpose is to surrender that very freedom to the Divine. Shri Krishna may create favorable circumstances or 'grace', but he will not force anyone to return to him because he respects the freedom he himself granted. Therefore, the individual must take the final step of signing their own 'resignation' from the role of the doer. This act of 'Akarta' (non-doer) involves letting Shri Krishna act through oneself, regardless of personal pain or preference. To distinguish between true surrender and mere laziness or hypocrisy, Acharya Prashant suggests examining the fruits of one's actions. If a choice leads to increased peace, clarity, and strength to follow the truth, it originates from a state of surrender. Conversely, if it leads to doubt, fear, or further entanglement in the ego, it is a product of personal bias or ignorance. True worship is always of the 'Nirguna' (formless), even if it uses 'Saguna' (form) as a medium. One must not mistake their own limited imagination for the reality of Shri Krishna. By standing with the truth, one gains the strength to continue standing with it, whereas moving away from it diminishes one's capacity for righteousness.