Acharya Prashant addresses a woman who is unable to leave a dishonest partner. He begins with an analogy, stating that if you keep a dog, you will have to go to the meat market. Similarly, as long as you stick with an unworthy person, you must endure the associated chaos and squalor. He points out that her presence in this situation is her own choice and has not been forced upon her. He advises that instead of focusing on the other person's meanness, she should investigate what within her craves for such meanness, as only meanness gets attracted to meanness. The speaker challenges the questioner's notion of loyalty, asking what was so great about this person that she offered her loyalty to him. He describes such loyalty as a cheap thing, an article for sale, and asserts that one's commitment must be reserved for the highest, for the Truth, not for any random person. He explains that one's loyalty must be reserved for the highest one can come across. He states that it is a fallacy, often driven by loneliness, cultural conditioning, and the fear of missing out, to make another person the center of one's universe. He further explains that when you place an ordinary person on a high pedestal, you create expectations that they cannot fulfill, which inevitably leads to hurt. Using another analogy, he says if you trust an elephant to fly, and it doesn't, the fault is not the elephant's but your own for having a foolish expectation. The problem lies within, in the part of oneself that gets attracted to unworthy people. He states that it is one's own responsibility to fill one's life with beauty and goodness. Ultimately, Acharya Prashant advises that it is better to live a solitary existence than to be coupled with a mischief-maker. He suggests that one should invest their life in a worthy cause, not a person, because most people are unworthy of such devotion. He concludes that the responsibility to bring goodness into one's life rests primarily upon oneself, not upon somebody else. If you do not do for yourself what you should, you will expect someone else to do it for you, and those expectations will never be fulfilled, leading to hurt.