Acharya Prashant advises to keep augmenting the quality of your love and not settle for something ordinary, mediocre, commonplace, or traditional. He states that love is the highest respect one can offer to anything. Therefore, one should figure out what is highest and fall in love with it. This highest thing does not necessarily have to be a person; it could be a cause or a mission. One must keep rising, and when one comes upon the truly lovable, the body and its concerns diminish in importance, to the point where even the ultimate sacrifice is acceptable. The speaker explains that our choices often come from a place where we just randomly decide to pursue things, not from love. For example, we opt for a piece of clothing because it is available or trending, or a course of study because it is popular. One gets married at a certain age because society, religion, and hormones decide it. There is no love in these choices. From the smallest things, like choosing footwear, to major life decisions, our choices are not based on love. We are drifters, and because our decisions are not based on love, we do not know what it means to die for something. Instead, the top priority is given to physical and mental security. Acharya Prashant asserts that to love, one must have some sense of who they are; otherwise, one only has attractions and compulsions. Love is both your highest tribute and your best medicine. It is a tribute when you bow down before something immense, and it is a medicine when, in a moment of helplessness, you seek treatment. He gives the example of a fat man fascinated by a mountain; for him, climbing it is both a tribute and a treatment. He concludes that love is not given the respect it deserves and that true love cannot be predictable, unlike the so-called love for one's own child, which is a random and predictable biological occurrence.