Acharya Prashant explains that the persistence of memories from past, shallow relationships is a clear indicator that one has not yet found depth in their current life. He argues that if a person were truly connected to something profound in the present, they would not be haunted by the superficiality of the past. He points out that people often leave relationships because they are stale and incomplete; therefore, it is illogical to expect freshness or fulfillment from those same memories now. The speaker emphasizes that being surrounded by fear, doubt, or incomplete memories signifies that one is standing in opposition to the Truth and the present moment. Using the analogy of a dog at a roadside eatery, Acharya Prashant illustrates how past trauma and conditioning prevent individuals from accepting fresh, offered love. Just as a dog might fear a kind hand and only feel comfortable eating dirty scraps from the ground, humans often prefer the familiarity of 'thrown scraps'—stale memories and old habits—because they are afraid of the intimacy and vulnerability required to accept something fresh and whole. He notes that while wages are earned through labor and calculation, love and the Divine are claimed through a sense of right. One does not earn God's grace through merit; rather, it is given because the Divine is infinite and abundant. He concludes by critiquing modern concepts of social justice and equality when applied to spiritual matters. He asserts that in the realm of love and Truth, human logic and 'justice' do not apply. He shares a parable of a master who pays all laborers equally regardless of when they started working, explaining that the Divine gives not based on what a person has earned, but because He has plenty to give. The speaker suggests that moving away from modern, calculative values and returning to a simpler, more direct relationship with the present will resolve these internal conflicts.