Acharya Prashant addresses the issue of giving up on tasks as soon as they become difficult. He explains that often, we don't pursue a new activity out of a deep love for it, but rather out of boredom with our current life's routines. This new pursuit is merely an escape from the tedium of the old one. Without understanding the root cause of this boredom, the new activity is just a modified version of the same old life system. It might seem like a new direction, but the doer remains unchanged. Since the doer is the same, the action cannot be truly new, even if it appears different on the surface due to changing circumstances like time and place. He uses the analogy of a person who doesn't know how to drive. Such a person will drive poorly on any road. Even if the road and scenery change, their incompetence remains. Similarly, when one switches from an activity like cricket, where they performed poorly due to a lack of discipline, to learning the guitar, the underlying person who lacks discipline is still the same. The habit of quitting when things get tough is the easy path that has been learned. The external changes are superficial because the internal doer, their tendencies, and their intentions have not changed. Acharya Prashant distinguishes between two types of people. One type feels energized and invigorated by challenges, seeing them as an opportunity to truly engage and come alive. The other type, when faced with a challenge, feels pressure and runs away. He states that a human is born only as a possibility, like raw material. To become a beautifully finished product, this raw material must undergo the difficult and fiery process of refinement through challenges. A true human is one who stands firm before challenges with their chest held high. The one who runs away is something else entirely, as their only learned skill is to quit. The raw material will remain just that—like soil—unless it is willing to be heated and molded by the fire of challenges.