Acharya Prashant explains that you value in others what you value in yourself. If you cherish your own ego and do not want anyone to find fault in you, you will also be afraid to find fault in others, thinking it will hurt them. This is because you yourself feel bad when a fault is pointed out in you. The solution is to become someone who does not feel bad about anything. Then you will not feel bad that others felt bad. For the sake of truth, if you stop feeling bad about things, then you will also stop feeling bad about conveying the truth to someone, even if it hurts them. The issue is not about others, but about the value you hold that one should not be hurt. This value is widely present among civilized and cultured people. The speaker has observed that people claim the entirety of religiosity is to not hurt anyone. He contrasts this with the words of masters like Shri Krishna or Christ, which hurt many. He criticizes poets and intellectuals who declare that the real thing is to not cause anyone pain or tears. He points out that saints like Meera cried their whole lives. Who knows or reads about Meera, Kabir, or Farid, who cried a lot? This value of not hurting anyone is taking deep root. People say, "Don't say something that might feel bad to someone." When people complain that his words are hurting them and they are not enjoying it, the speaker's response is, "To hell with your enjoyment. We are bringing you the truth, not entertainment." He relates this to how artists' films, paintings, or books are banned or burned because they hurt sentiments. He clarifies that only the ego gets hurt; the Self (Atma) is never hurt. So, if something is getting hurt, its name is ego. He quotes Rumi, who said that if you get so troubled by a little rubbing, how will you shine? And if you are so bothered by a small wound, how will light enter you? If you protect yourself from everything that hurts you, your cage will never break. If no one strikes a blow, how will the bars of your prison break? This leads to a mutual agreement among people: "I will not expose your fakeness, and you will not expose mine." This is a rule people have made among themselves. If you become someone who is not hurt, you will also hurt us. So, it's better to instill the value in all children that one should not be rude or hurt others. The one who is no longer afraid of being hurt becomes dangerous because they no longer care about the safety of others' egos. They will not care if you are hurt.