Acharya Prashant addresses the feeling of not liking human beings, suggesting it may reflect the current state of humanity. However, he emphasizes that humans possess the potential to be lovable, and one has a responsibility to help them reach that potential. He explains that clarity is the state of being empty and having nothing of one's own, which allows for freedom and spontaneous insights without carrying mental baggage. Regarding spiritual terms, he notes that while one can split hairs between knowing and realization, they are essentially the same, and excessive terminology is unnecessary as they all point to the same truth. On the topic of worship, Acharya Prashant defines God as the absolute truth rather than a fictional character. He asserts that real worship involves knowing the sacred and refusing to surrender to the mundane or ordinary. He redefines prasadam as the fruits of realization and inner illumination gained from contact with a luminous source. He explains that true prasadam is not merely food but the radiance and insights one shares with the world after personal realization. He concludes that rituals without understanding are merely mechanical acts, whereas rituals with understanding hold spiritual meaning.