Acharya Prashant interprets the verses of Sheikh Farid, where a longing soul addresses a crow, symbolizing the world or circumstances. The soul permits the crow to consume all the flesh of the body but pleads for its two eyes to be spared, as they hold the hope of seeing the Beloved. Acharya Prashant explains that the 'body' represents the limited, incomplete self or the ego, which is bound by boundaries and various sheaths like the physical, subtle, and causal bodies. He suggests that the 'flesh' refers to the artificial layers, masks, and social conditionings that cover our true essence. The prayer to the crow is essentially a call for spiritual nakedness, asking for all external attachments, wealth, relationships, and false knowledge to be stripped away so that only the core aspiration for Truth remains. The eyes represent the final corner of the mind that is destined to merge with the Truth or the Soul. Acharya Prashant emphasizes that while common people have eyes that wander toward a thousand worldly masters, a saint's vision is one-pointed and unwavering. He describes the human condition as being 'blind with eyes,' where people possess the physical capacity to see but are blinded by social and biological conditioning. He notes that while it is easy to wake someone who is actually asleep, it is a 'miracle' to awaken those who are pretending to be awake while being fully complicit in a false reality. The ultimate strength of a seeker lies in the persistent desire to return to their true home, the Truth, which is the only thing worth seeing.