Acharya Prashant explains that any kind of attainment, whether physical or mental, indicates the presence of a bonded one within. He states that the full or limitless cannot attain anything, as it cannot add to itself anymore. Only the one with boundaries can aspire to attain. When there are boundaries, there is a limit and finiteness, which creates scope for addition, enhancement, or increment. He questions what one can add to infinity or what infinity can further grow into, concluding there is no such possibility. The desire or resolve to have these things is bondage for the very same reason that physical attainment or the desire for it is bondage. One starts from a point of incompletion and adds layers to this core of incompletion. The speaker uses an analogy of a stone, explaining that one can put layers of gold, silver, and platinum on it, but these layers only hide the core; they do not change it. The core remains a stone. The stone attempts to put on these layers because of its inherent 'stoneness'. The success of the stone in covering itself with precious materials does not rid it of its stoneness but rather reaffirms it. When one feels little, incomplete, or hollow, any attempt to cover up that hollowness just reinforces its power. The right direction of action must be internal, not external. Instead of trying to obtain things to appear different, one must work on their own 'stoneness' or worthlessness. When you acquire something valuable like gold, you become its servant, dedicated to protecting it. The more you accumulate, the bigger a servant you become. The speaker concludes by asking whether you own your things or if your things own you, highlighting that spirituality is about unleashing yourself from this bondage.