Acharya Prashant explains that the object of love is so gigantic and total that it leaves no space for the dualistic subject to survive, rendering the object a non-object. He clarifies that in love, there is neither giving nor receiving because both actions require the presence of a separate giver or receiver, which reinforces the ego. Instead, love is described as the absence of the doer, or the highest action of the small self. Using the analogy of a civilian who sacrifices himself to destroy an enemy ammunition depot, he illustrates that love involves attempting the impossible and requires the complete demolition of one's self-protection and safety. Love is the pursuit of something beyond one's own measure, where the task is so immense that it can only be accomplished if the individual is willing to let their own structures and survival instincts collapse.