Acharya Prashant explains the human tendency to feel envy towards spiritually elevated individuals. He states that when we encounter someone who is a true "resident of the skies," instead of feeling delighted, we turn "green with envy." Superficially, we might worship the gods, but internally, we want them to be fallible. We genuinely celebrate the moment we feel a god has fallen, as it is something we were internally hoping for. This is why there is an equal abundance of literature that glorifies gods and literature that denigrates them. The speaker notes that people find a particular satisfaction in denigrating gods. He provides examples, such as claims that there were a thousand flaws in Shri Krishna's character, or that Ramakrishna was merely an epilepsy patient having fits rather than being in a state of deep meditation (samadhi). Similarly, some have called Jesus a "wandering loafer" who was carrying a concubine, Mary Magdalene. This behavior stems from a "perverse pleasure." The root of this pleasure is the mentality: "If I am not high, why should I allow you to remain high? You must be pulled down." Because one refuses to rise up, they try to pull others down. Acharya Prashant concludes that there is no pleasure greater than "spitting at a clean place," and the intensity of this pleasure is unequaled.