Acharya Prashant explains that karma is often misunderstood as merely past sins or wrongdoings. He emphasizes that freedom from karma cannot be achieved through more actions or efforts to erase the past, as the doer remains the same. If the person who committed the acts remains unchanged, any new effort is simply a reinforcement of the old self. True liberation comes from the dissolution of the 'karta' or the doer. Repentance is not an act but a deep, life-changing realization that the doer was mistaken and false. The doer's primary motive is self-preservation, and as long as the doer exists, their actions will stem from the same root of violence and lovelessness. Regarding anger, Acharya Prashant asserts that we often call it unjustified only as an afterthought. In reality, we authorize our anger because we feel victimized, cheated, or shortchanged. We nurture stories of suffering and sacrifice to maintain a sense of moral superiority, which serves as the root of our anger. While we try to suppress the outward expression of anger due to social costs and public image, we rarely address the inner filth and grudges that feed it. He warns that unexpressed, simmering anger is more dangerous than expressed anger, as it allows one to maintain a false facade of peace while remaining internally volatile.