Acharya Prashant explains that the coexistence of agony and doubtlessness in the words of Kabir Saheb is the hallmark of true love. He describes love as the state of knowing that separation exists while simultaneously knowing that such separation is false and must end. This doubtlessness arises from the sheer intensity of suffering. While common people tolerate small irritants and use coping mechanisms like mundane pleasures to mask their discontent, the saint refuses to compromise or lie to himself. For the saint, the pain of separation from the Divine is so immense and constant that it becomes impossible to endure indefinitely, making a resolution inevitable. He further elaborates that the common man's life is often bad but never bad enough to collapse because he tempers his suffering with occasional pleasures. In contrast, the saint lacks these distractions and faces the reality of his suffering with complete honesty. This honesty brings the situation to a boiling point where change becomes mandatory. The very magnitude of the saint's longing serves as a conviction that union is near, much like the darkness being deepest just before the dawn. Ultimately, the saint's refusal to settle for a mediocre, controlled state of suffering leads him to the certainty of liberation.