Acharya Prashant addresses the fear of being judged during presentations by advising the questioner to put his heart into the presentation. He explains that when your heart is in your work, your mind will not be in the audience. Conversely, when your heart is not in your work, your mind wanders into the world. The speaker reframes the issue, stating that the problem is not an excessive concern for others' opinions, but rather a lack of heart in the work itself, which is often done merely for marks, a degree, or to complete a formality. To illustrate his point, Acharya Prashant uses the analogy of a cricketer facing a fast bowler in a stadium full of 80,000 people. The cricketer's mind must be totally absorbed in the game; if he starts thinking about the audience's opinions, it indicates a lack of love for cricket. Similarly, if one is worried about being judged during a presentation, it is because they do not truly love the task at hand. The solution, therefore, boils down to love. He encourages the questioner to go deep into whatever he is doing and to avoid things that do not deserve the depth of his attention, as half-heartedness is the curse of life. He further elaborates that people often live lukewarm lives, neither cold and dead nor boiling with vigor. A young person, especially, needs some heat and temperature in life, which is provided by love. Love has a cleansing power that helps evaporate internal conditioning and nonsense. He advises being just towards one's academics, profession, and relationships, so that whatever one touches bears the imprint of their authenticity. The presentation is not just a task but a period of one's life, and if one cannot be immersed in it, they are missing out on life itself. He concludes by urging the questioner to live fully, not to be divided with a mind scanning the audience, but to be wholly immersed in the work.