Acharya Prashant explains that the experiences one has in life depend significantly on who one is. He uses a cricket analogy to illustrate this point, describing a yorker-length delivery. For an unskilled, novice batsman, this delivery results in being bowled out. An average batsman would simply block it or dig it out. However, a trained, skilled, and confident batsman might step out, use the length of the delivery to his advantage, and hit it for a boundary. The same situation yields three different results depending on the person facing it. The yorker is thus both a menace and an opportunity; it can crush your toes or get you six runs. The speaker generalizes this by stating, "What you are is what you get." If you are continuously getting rubbish from the world or being mistreated, it is a reflection of who you are. In contrast, the saints have lived like kings even when the world prosecuted them, because their kingship is within. Consequently, all their experiences are perceived in the light of this inner kingship. It doesn't matter what happens to them externally; their experience is always of themselves. To further elaborate, he mentions the cricketer Viv Richards, who walks to and from the crease with his "swag" intact, regardless of whether he is coming to bat or has been dismissed. He is still "King Richards" because his experience is of who he is, not of the external event. Conversely, a lower-order, incapable batsman might score a lucky six from a top edge but will feel sheepish, as the fluke proves his incompetence. Whether he gets bowled out or scores six runs by chance, he remains a "sheep." Ultimately, you get what you are. While you will never have control over the random situations that hit you, what you make of them depends on who you are. The world might throw a yorker at you, but you can receive it as a full toss. The world can give you something, but what you receive is a blessing, depending on your inner state.