Acharya Prashant explains that the mind uses the term "Piya" or Beloved when it realizes the futility of daily worldly affairs and experiences a sense of incompleteness. This mind has seen through the illusions and attachments of worldly relationships and seeks authentic, unconditional love. He describes this as a state where the mind is hungry for the Supreme and is not satisfied with fragments of love. This yearning is traditionally viewed as the feminine aspect of the mind, which exists in everyone and seeks a union so deep that the sense of duality disappears. The speaker interprets Kabir Saheb's teaching about opening the veil to meet the Beloved. He identifies this veil as the ego, which acts as a filter through which we perceive the world, hiding the manifest Truth. Acharya Prashant asserts that the Divine is always present and available, but the individual remains separated due to their own impurities and conditions. He notes that while worldly relationships often depend on maintaining masks and veils, the relationship with the Divine requires their total removal. To meet the Beloved, one must become like Him—vast, selfless, and beyond the petty anxieties of the ego. Furthermore, the discourse warns against taking pride in wealth and physical beauty, as these are merely labels and validations provided by others. Kabir Saheb's imagery of a lamp in an empty temple is used to describe the ideal state of living: being centered in the light of awareness while the periphery remains empty of worldly clutter. Acharya Prashant concludes that one must remain steadfast in this inner light and stop blaming external circumstances for the lack of peace, as the Divine is already residing within every atom and every heart.