Acharya Prashant explains that in reality, no person desires another person's body. This statement might be shocking, especially considering the prevalence of lust-driven crimes, but even the most lustful person does not truly want the body. The body is merely a makeshift arrangement, a stopgap measure. We use the body to manage our lives because what we truly want is not available to us. The body is used as a cheap substitute for something else. He uses the analogy of a child who, unable to find their mother, is given a nanny, or if they miss their mother's lap, is given a toy. Similarly, another person's body is like a toy used to console oneself for the absence of something real. It may entertain the heart for a while, but one knows it is not the real thing. To try and fill the inner void with another's body is like a child trying to entertain themselves with a toy. If a relationship based on lust breaks, there will be no resentment if it is replaced by a relationship of love. However, if there is no love and the entire relationship is based on the body, and then the body is also taken away, agitation and irritation arise. One then validly questions what is left in the relationship. If you are reducing the natural, physical aspects of a relationship, you must compensate for that lack with higher things like compassion, knowledge, and love. Then, no one will complain. Instead, the other person will feel blessed and more joyful, realizing the relationship has gained more depth. Before, there was only the physical aspect, which is fleeting, but now what is being received is deeper, more permanent, and more real. As a person progresses spiritually, their consciousness deepens, and they begin to hesitate from engaging in activities they once did blindly, such as wasting time or participating in mindless social events. When these things are removed, a vacuum is created. This vacuum must be filled with something higher. If left empty, both the individual and those around them will feel irritated, feeling that spirituality has taken something away. Spirituality takes away the trivial to give the great. If you have reduced something trivial, you must now add something that is great and vast. Then you will experience joy, and others will thank you for uplifting them as well.