A questioner expresses his dilemma of feeling stuck in his job, which he has been doing for 14 years. He explains that listening to Acharya Prashant's teachings creates a restlessness within him, making him feel like his brain will explode. He feels his path forward is blurry because while he doesn't want to continue his current work for even a day, his commitments are such that leaving it might worsen his situation. He feels he is unable to make the right choice. Acharya Prashant responds that the path is not blurry; the problem is that the questioner wants to walk the path on his own terms. Truth is straightforward and innocent, devoid of the complications we create. The feeling of an internal 'explosion' is not due to the teachings but is a result of the conflict between the desire for a right life and the attachment to one's current situation. One has developed an attachment or self-interest with the present state and is unwilling to let it go, yet also realizes that to live a right life, a change is necessary. This friction and struggle are what he experiences as an explosion. One cannot have both simultaneously. The speaker elaborates that the primary obstacles are the self-imposed conditions. He gives an example: "I want to do the right job, but only if I get a salary of two lakh rupees a month." When such conditions are not met, one feels stuck, unable to move forward on the right path but also unable to go back. He advises to remove these conditions, as the right thing cannot be secondary to them. He warns against building a mountain of expenses, stating that it is not the world but one's expenses that enslave them. He particularly cautions against expenses that bind one to the future, like EMIs, using the metaphor of keeping an expensive elephant which is costly to acquire and even costlier to maintain. Acharya Prashant concludes by addressing how to identify the right work. He says that just as it is clear that working for a tobacco company is not good because it harms the world, one should use the same yardstick for any work. One should see if their work benefits others. A person's own interest and the interest of others are interconnected. A job that harms others cannot truly benefit you, even if it seems profitable; that profit will eventually consume you. Conversely, if your work benefits others, you will also benefit, even if the monetary returns are less. Knowing the impact of one's work on others is not difficult; it is an open fact.