Acharya Prashant explains that completeness and emptiness are essentially the same; completeness means being whole, while emptiness means being free from incompleteness. Shri Buddha spoke in this language as well. He points out that facts do not fill the mind because they do not contain ego. Instead, the mind is filled with thoughts, opinions, and memories related to the self. He suggests that a person is more receptive when they feel they have not yet fully grasped a concept, as the conviction of having understood something immediately stops the act of listening. He distinguishes between physical pain and mental suffering, noting that while pain is a physical occurrence, suffering is a mental state. Suffering arises only when there is resistance to pain or a feeling that one deserves happiness instead of the current situation. He explains that if one does not oppose pain, it does not turn into suffering. He provides examples of people who are happy despite being in a hospital and others who are miserable in places of entertainment, highlighting that suffering is born when one imposes expectations on facts and demands that reality be different. Acharya Prashant discusses how failure is linked to result-oriented actions. If a person works solely for promotion or money rather than out of peace or love, they will feel broken when the desired outcome is not achieved. He emphasizes that true celebration of life is possible only when actions are not driven by the desire for results. He uses the example of a monkey whose natural movement keeps it fit without seeking a result, contrasting it with humans who exercise for specific outcomes and often lose their discipline once the goal is removed. He concludes that seeking results leads to bitterness because worldly success is always relative and temporary.