Acharya Prashant explains that one does not live with a family as physical entities but within relationships. To address anger, one must change the quality of the relationship rather than just physically moving away. He clarifies that anger often arises not because another person is a burden, but because of one's own hidden greed or expectation of a return. When these expectations are present, the other person is perceived as a burden, leading to self-directed anger for tolerating the situation. A healthy relationship is free from such greed, and changing a relationship requires looking inward at the quality of one's own mind rather than trying to change the other person.