Acharya Prashant interprets the words of Kabir Saheb, 'I shall not beg for the sake of my own body, but for the sake of the supreme good, I feel no shame.' He begins with a story of indigenous people in America who did not understand the concept of private property, believing that since the sun, air, and water belong to no one, the crops cannot belong to an individual either. This illustrates a state of being where the sense of 'mine' and 'thine' has dissolved. He then shares a story of Kabir Saheb and his son Kamal going to steal food to feed guests. When Kabir Saheb alerts the homeowners, it signifies that there is no guilt or secrecy when one acts beyond the ego. The speaker explains that the constant urge to accumulate stems from the ego's fear of being vulnerable or having to ask others. When the ego is erased, the entire world is seen as one's own home, and the act of 'asking' disappears because there is no 'other' to ask from.