Acharya Prashant asserts that the Gita can only come from someone who understands the world, and if one understands the world, they cannot keep failing in it. He questions how the Gita can come from or even be understood by someone who is proven to be an idiot every morning and evening. If a person is a joker, a clown, an idiot, or a loser in this world, they have no business touching the Gita. He elaborates that if you are a loser everywhere—in relationships, school, college, work, and sports—you have no common ground with the Upanishads, which come from winners of the highest order. To understand the Gita, one must have something in common with Shri Krishna, who brought victory when defeat seemed probable. In contrast, a loser is someone who will snatch defeat even when victory is all theirs. The speaker dismisses the notion of being uninterested in the world while being drawn to Krishna, calling this a "half-embrace." He states that such a person is not uninterested but rather marginalized and the "rubbish of the world." Citing Darwin, he suggests that those who are unfit will not survive for long. A half-embrace is no embrace at all; a full embrace means being a winner in the world. The man of God is a winner in the world as well, because God and the world are one—it is a "God-world." If you are a loser in the world, you do not know God. Acharya Prashant further explains that every living being, from a cuckoo to an ant, is an expert and an epitome of excellence in its specific field. He challenges the listener by asking, "What is your expertise? Is there anything that you are a master of?" He posits that the Self, the Heart, or God within is the climax of perfection. If God is perfection, one must at least possess excellence to have any proximity to Him. Without even excellence, one cannot be close to God.