Acharya Prashant explains that all forms of karma—accumulated, destiny, and current actions—pertain solely to the ego. He clarifies that the soul is free from the burden of past or future actions; it is only the ego that considers itself the doer and consequently becomes the sufferer of the results. To be free from the consequences of past sins or actions, one must undergo a fundamental transformation where the old self, the one who committed those acts, ceases to exist. This is not a mere verbal claim but a genuine dissolution of the past identity. If the ego remains at the center, the past will continue to haunt and influence the present. He further describes life as a play where one should participate fully without becoming attached or entangled. Using the analogy of a playhouse with limited time, he suggests that one should play all games but be ready to leave everything behind the moment the 'bell rings.' Suffering and emotional wounds serve as reminders that one was meant to play, not to possess. True freedom lies in being intensely involved in the world while remaining unattached, such that one can embrace something one moment and set it aside the next without being enslaved by it. He concludes by redefining rebirth, stating that it is not just about a new physical body after death, but happens every moment as the mind shifts its focus from one object of desire to another.