Acharya Prashant explains that spirituality is fundamentally different from morality and social ethics. While morality often prioritizes the preservation of life and social order, spirituality, as exemplified by Shri Krishna, transcends these dualities. He contrasts a popular story of Tenali Rama, which focuses on saving a bird's life through cleverness, with a Sufi version where a fakir simply states that the bird's fate is in the questioner's hands. He asserts that Shri Krishna never placed ultimate value on physical life or death, as evidenced by the context of the Bhagavad Gita being a battlefield and his actions like the burning of the Khandava forest. For Shri Krishna, the physical body is transient and its end is not a tragedy, as the true self is never slain. The speaker further discusses how human ego attempts to mold the image of Shri Krishna into something comfortable and socially acceptable, turning him into a support for the ego rather than its solution. He notes that in his own time, Shri Krishna was not universally revered as a god or even a saint, as evidenced by the fact that many great warriors were willing to take up arms against him. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that spirituality is the transcendence of all boundaries, images, and values derived from social or biological needs. A truly spiritual person, like Shri Krishna, has no fixed personality; they are a pure response to the present moment, appearing as a warrior, a lover, or a flute player depending on the situation, without being attached to any single identity.