Acharya Prashant explains that the reason repeated hammering or efforts to wake someone up do not seem to work is because sleep itself is non-existent. He asserts that sleep is merely a concept or an illusion that individuals convince themselves of, rather than a state of ignorance or unconsciousness. By believing one is asleep, an individual justifies the idea of imperfection and the need for future achievement or betterment. He emphasizes that everyone is already wide awake, at the climax of perfection, and represents the absolute, unbreakable truth. Therefore, no method of awakening can succeed because there is nothing that actually needs to be awakened. He further clarifies that his incessant hammering is intended to demonstrate that no external effort or medicine can work on someone who is already healthy but committed to believing in a sickness. The failure of these methods serves as proof of the falseness of the imagined state of being asleep. Acharya Prashant suggests that people already know everything he says even before he speaks, as their deepest self is already enlightened. He describes his role not as teaching something new, but as pointing out the eternal knowledge that the individual already possesses, urging them to drop the juvenile fancies of seeking enlightenment or a distant God.