Acharya Prashant explains that if you have no concern for the world, you cannot claim to love anyone. He illustrates this by saying that if a person is unaware of how many animal species go extinct daily but claims to love their spouse, both are lying. He asserts that neither of them knows love, and their relationship is purely based on selfishness. It is better, he says, that such a selfish relationship does not adopt any symbol, as it would be an insult to the symbol itself. He uses a metaphor of a couple, whom he calls 'Lolu and Loli', sitting with a freshly slaughtered lamb between them. They express their love for each other, with one saying, "I can give my life for you," and the other replying, "Before you die, my dear, I will die." Meanwhile, the lamb thinks, "Neither of you is going to die. I am the one who has already died. Your talk of dying is just a drama; I am the one who has been slaughtered." He connects this to wedding celebrations that cause immense pollution. He points out the hypocrisy of people who are heartbroken by COVID-19 restrictions limiting their guest list to fifty, as it denies them the opportunity to destroy the environment. He questions how a relationship can be called loving when it involves polluting drains and air, cutting trees, and metaphorically raping the mountains. Acharya Prashant further criticizes the violence inherent in wedding customs, such as wearing silk sherwanis and expensive silk sarees, which are produced by killing thousands of silkworms in boiling water. This is done merely so that the couple shines in their wedding photos, taken by a photographer hired for a large sum. After such a wedding, he asks how the couple can claim to be in love. He questions the foundation of such relationships, asking if a woman would marry a man without a job, or if a man would marry a woman if she were not physically attractive. He points out that people even consider caste and lineage before marriage, asking what kind of love first inquires about one's caste. He concludes that the love that suddenly erupts only after such conditions are met is not love at all.