Acharya Prashant responds to a question about where corruption enters the mind, which has emerged from the pure Source. He states unequivocally that there is no corruption anywhere. He explains that this is not just a thought but a fundamental truth: "All is already and always perfect." There is no corruption, no deficiency, and no incompletion. When the questioner brings up getting stuck in pleasure and pain, Acharya Prashant probes why one moves towards pleasure. It is because of a sense of incompletion. He emphasizes that the truth of perfection is omnipresent, like the walls, air, and light of the room. The fact that you are moving towards pleasure means you are assuming that the current state is not perfect. This very assumption of imperfection is the only corruption that exists. The belief that there is corruption is, in itself, the corruption. He clarifies that there is no actual corruption, but there is a thought that something is lacking. To fulfill this perceived lack, one moves towards pleasure. This belief that something is lacking is the only deficiency. This is Maya (illusion): the feeling of lack. Maya is not real but appears to be. It appears as the feeling that something is lacking, even though everything is already perfect and complete. The problem of corruption exists only because you are raising the thought about it. If you were to look at it with attention, you would find it is not there.