Acharya Prashant addresses the internal conflict between spiritual devotion and the distractions of worldly life. He uses the metaphor of a house that has been neglected for eons to represent the human mind. As the beloved, representing the Truth or God, approaches, the individual feels a desperate urge to clean the house. However, the process of cleaning reveals mountains of hidden filth and garbage that were previously unnoticed. This discovery often leads to feelings of irritation, tiredness, and annoyance. Acharya Prashant clarifies that this irritation is not directed at the Truth, but at one's own accumulated mental impurities. He emphasizes that the Truth cannot be met in artificial or external places; it must be invited into one's own internal 'house,' which must be pristinely clean to be worthy of such a presence. He advises that instead of letting annoyance slow one down, it should be used as a signal that the cleaning process is working and that hidden rot is finally being exposed. He encourages maintaining a state of celebration and cheerfulness even in the midst of this difficult struggle. He suggests that a fighter who does not also sing will eventually lose the strength to sustain the battle. By referencing great saints like Kabir Saheb and Bulleh Shah, he explains that their teachings were often expressed in verse and song because the greatest beauty and poetry arise from the depths of suffering and the struggle for the Truth. He concludes that one should face the spiritual journey with joy and humor, even laughing at oneself when necessary, to ensure the meeting with the beloved happens successfully.