Acharya Prashant explains that people often mistake a fleeting moment of attraction for love. He says that a moment comes when someone seems very beautiful and important, and that moment has its own intoxication. However, once you have experienced that intoxication, it is time to wake up and move on, as that moment has passed. He addresses the issue of loneliness, stating that there is great joy in being alone. Being alone does not mean you are unique in the world; in a large population, there are thousands and lakhs of people worthy of being in your life. However, they are crowded out because our lives are already filled with so many people that a decent person cannot enter. A questioner shares that he gets very irritated and things have escalated to physical altercations when his family members create obstacles while he is listening to the sessions. He feels guilty about his anger and believes he should take ownership of it. Acharya Prashant responds by questioning what the questioner will do by taking ownership. He points out that the questioner has identified two mistakes: his family interfering and his own angry reaction. However, the speaker states that the real mistake has not yet been identified. The fundamental mistake is considering those people as his own, which is a form of doer-ship. The biggest doer-ship is not in thinking 'I did it' when you didn't, but in considering someone as your own when they are not. A true relationship, one of love, would not stop you from moving towards the truth, like listening to the Gita. The fact that they obstruct you proves the relationship is not real. The speaker further explains that what is often called love is merely a biochemical and biological process, like rust on iron or fungus on clothes left in the rain. He compares it to a seasonal affair, dependent on weather and hormones. He quotes Kabir Saheb, saying, "The body in which love does not dwell is like a blacksmith's bellows, which breathes without life." He advises not to be surprised by conflicts in such relationships because they are not special. He also mentions that the world both envies and respects a person who has the courage to walk alone. He suggests that knowledge acts as a sieve; everything coarse gets stuck in it, and only the subtle passes through. This process of filtering out unworthy people happens on its own when one gains knowledge.