Acharya Prashant explains that an individual is not truly greedy for experiences themselves, but rather for the fulfillment that those experiences promise to provide. The experiencer seeks a sense of completion, yet often fails to verify if the promise of an experience has been fulfilled. He emphasizes the importance of investigating every transaction of life, just as one would carefully count currency during a financial exchange. Since time is a finite and irretrievable resource, one must be vigilant about how it is spent. Wasting time on empty experiences leads to an impoverished mind and a drained life. He further discusses how the repression of the fact of death leads people to live as if they have infinite time, causing them to waste themselves on colorful but hollow experiences. Saints remind us of death so that we stop throwing our lives away. Acharya Prashant asserts that every action and transaction should be measured against a single goal: whether it brings one closer to the nameless Truth. If an experience or a 'shop' in the marketplace of the world does not serve this ultimate purpose, one will only find themselves entangled and depleted. One must constantly ask if a particular engagement is leading toward the goal or merely resulting in a loss of life's precious energy.