Acharya Prashant explains that the beginning of spirituality lies in the conscious acceptance of one's poor condition. He notes that people often avoid this realization because it implies that their life's investments have been wasted, yet avoiding the truth only leads to further ruin. He clarifies that spirituality does not conflict with fulfilling basic physical needs and critiques the common desire to balance the worldly and the divine. He describes the divine as incomparable and warns that attempting to weigh it against worldly matters is an act of ego. He further discusses how deep conditioning and fear can make a person lose the desire for freedom, comparing it to a bird that refuses to fly even when its cage is open. Finally, he categorizes anger into three types: Tamasic, Rajasic, and Sattvic. He asserts that while total absence of anger belongs only to a state of complete Samadhi, one should strive for Sattvic anger, which arises for righteous reasons such as the protection of peace or scriptures, rather than for petty personal or ego-driven reasons.