Acharya Prashant explains that what is commonly understood as love between human beings is often a misunderstanding of the mind's deeper attraction toward liberation. He clarifies that love is essentially the consciousness's longing for health, completeness, and wisdom. If a person in one's life acts as a medium for such liberation and understanding, then that relationship can be considered loving or a 'good association.' However, most human relationships are based on physical, emotional, or financial comforts, which do not fall under the category of true spiritual love. He points out that people often ignore the flaws of those they like simply because they derive some pleasure from them, which is a very ordinary and often misleading form of affection. Addressing the example of a mother's love, Acharya Prashant argues that if a child goes astray despite a mother's 'love,' it indicates that the love was lacking in wisdom. He suggests that ordinary love is often a tool of illusion that can lead to ruin because it focuses on superficial comforts like food, toys, or gadgets rather than the child's consciousness. He makes a provocative point that the world's greatest problem is not hate, but this low-quality, ordinary love. Hate is merely a byproduct of such flawed love; when love is shallow and possessive, it inevitably turns into its opposite. True spiritual love, however, is like nectar and does not produce hate. Quoting Kabir Saheb, he emphasizes that true love is only that which leads one to the 'Master' or the Self. He defines a true lover as someone who connects you with your soul or the ultimate truth. He warns that what is often glorified as love, especially for women, can become a set of heavy chains that demand endless sacrifice and endurance. He concludes by stating that wanting the 'good' of others is useless if one does not understand what 'good' actually means. Without spiritual understanding or 'Bodha,' even well-intentioned actions can cause harm. He encourages deep reflection, questioning long-held beliefs, and the study of wisdom literature to develop true understanding.