Acharya Prashant addresses the feeling of incompleteness and the tendency to seek fulfillment in others by advising one to experiment with their dependencies. He explains that while disappointment in a relationship with a person is very obvious and hurtful, the issue is not the person but the inner tendency to depend. This tendency is what causes one to seek fulfillment through an external object, be it a person or a thing, regardless of its actual worth, much like a very hungry person will eat whatever is available. The speaker points out that this tendency to depend manifests in both big and small ways. While the disappointment from a failed relationship is a large, noticeable event, we often overlook our numerous small attachments and dependencies in daily life, such as to a particular food or item of clothing. He suggests that by taking care of this tendency in small, everyday matters, one can avoid facing major disappointments in so-called big matters like relationships. The key is to question the importance one assigns to the objects of their craving. Acharya Prashant elaborates that nothing external has any absolute value of its own; its value is projected by our own sense of incompleteness. The more importance we give to something outside of ourselves, the more we reinforce the belief in our own inner poverty. He connects this to the wisdom of non-duality, which teaches that one is already a complete, indivisible totality. Therefore, the popular notion of finding a 'better half' is flawed, as a union of two incomplete entities, or two beggars, cannot result in completeness. Ultimately, he advises against making one's inner well-being conditional upon any external factor, as external conditions are always changing and beyond one's control. A relationship founded on dependence cannot be a healthy one. The path to feeling complete lies in recognizing and addressing the tendency to depend, starting with the small, unnoticed attachments in one's life, which prevents one from making larger mistakes in relationships.