Acharya Prashant explains a verse by Kabir Saheb, stating that a saint does not hoard or accumulate possessions but takes only what is necessary for immediate sustenance. He notes that accumulation arises from a fear of the future and a lack of faith. When an individual trusts that the Divine is present everywhere and will provide at the right time, the need to store for the future disappears. He likens the accumulation of wealth to a form of malnutrition where the ego swells because the individual lacks a connection to the Truth. He emphasizes that the sense of 'fullness' comes from being with the Divine, which makes material accumulation seem laughable and insulting. The speaker warns against making businessmen or scientists one's life ideals or gurus. He explains that businessmen are focused on capturing value in a vault, while scientists are focused on capturing truth in intellectual knowledge. Neither path involves the surrender required to realize that the highest reality cannot be possessed or intellectually categorized. True wisdom, as exemplified by Kabir Saheb, is the simple realization that the Divine is omnipresent, rendering complex intellectual pursuits and material hoarding unnecessary. He suggests that while a scientist has data, a leaf 'knows' its essence simply by being, which is a deeper form of knowledge. Finally, Acharya Prashant clarifies that his words are not meant to be a code of conduct or a set of instructions to stop reading or learning. He distinguishes between giving an 'updesh' (sermon) and facilitating a transformation. He emphasizes the importance of total transformation, which he describes as being born anew in every moment. A transformed person is like a newborn child, free from the weight of past accumulations, baggage, or intellectual documents, living in a state of constant freshness and presence.