Acharya Prashant explains that in this lifetime, one is being looted by countless people and has forgotten one's real father. He questions if there is any need to be looted or suppressed by anyone. Drawing an analogy with college ragging, he states that just as there are anti-ragging squads, a system is in place to protect you. If you dislike being looted, you just have to say so. However, people voluntarily choose to be ragged and live a life of disrespect. This choice stems from having forgotten the real master. Because they have forgotten their true source, they do not see or accept the helping hand that is extended to them. The speaker emphasizes that if a student decides not to be ragged, the entire administration will come to their aid. Similarly, if one chooses not to be dishonored by the world, they would not have to suffer. This choice to be ragged is made throughout life. You are being looted and beaten by those who have no right to do so, simply because you do not belong to your real father. You do not respect your real helper, your real father. The consequence is that you live in fear of the world, where anything can scare you. This fear arises from a lack of faith in and connection with your true source. Acharya Prashant describes the life of an ordinary person as an "80-year ragging," which only ends at the funeral pyre, which he calls the "fresher's party." He says that everyone has tormented you—the young, the old, your own, and strangers. He mentions that Kabir Saheb taught that these tormentors will not be there for you when you need them. The speaker asserts that nothing would be lost if you refused to be ragged by the world. You are scared, and that is why you allow it to happen daily. This fear is a result of faithlessness and insolence. The root cause of being scared and getting ragged is forgetting what should be remembered—your true source—and instead believing that the world is everything and you must live by its rules to avoid loss.