Acharya Prashant explains the profound meaning behind Kabir Saheb's couplet regarding the gardener and the flowers. He describes how buds represent individuals who are fearful of death because they have not yet reached their full potential or peak expression. For a bud, death is a terrifying nightmare because life would feel wasted if it ended before blossoming. In contrast, a flower represents one who has attained completeness, spread their fragrance, and fulfilled their highest possibility. For such a person, death is not a fear but a blessing or a graceful departure. He notes that the gardener, symbolizing the divine or time, only picks the flowers that have fully bloomed, while the buds are left to continue their struggle in the world of time. Acharya Prashant further clarifies that those who fear spiritual realization often do so because they believe it will lead to the end of their worldly attachments. He compares this to a bud refusing to bloom out of fear of being picked. He emphasizes that everyone must eventually perish, but the quality of death depends on how one has lived. One who has lived fully and attained self-knowledge becomes fearless and is not attached to life. He contrasts two types of endings: one where a person is dragged away by the personification of death (Yamraj) due to their ignorance and attachments, and another where a person gracefully merges with the Divine (Shri Krishna) through their own blossoming. He urges the listener to attain spiritual maturity quickly so that their end is a beautiful union rather than a forced departure.