Acharya Prashant explains that looking at one Vivekananda and expecting all youth to be like him demonstrates ingratitude and disrespect. People do not understand what an impossibility a figure like Vivekananda is; they do not appreciate him and thus feel that anyone can become a Vivekananda. This lack of appreciation is likened to not knowing the colossal height of the Himalayas. One might gather a small mound of mud in their lawn and expect it to have a snow-capped peak, just like the Himalayas. When this 24-inch high mound doesn't have snow, one complains, failing to respect the glory of the Himalayas and what it takes to have snow-crowned peaks. The snow crown is not cheap; it requires the height of a giant, a giant that people do not respect. Human beings are compared to these small mounds of earth, while religious teachers and Gurus are like the mighty Everests. Yet, people compare themselves to these great figures and feel disappointed when they don't measure up. The speaker challenges the audience to try being a Guru Nanak Dev or a Swami Vivekananda for just one day, or even one hour, to realize how impossible a Guru is and where humanity would be without them. It has become a fad to curse religion and dismiss it as outdated, without even reading the ancient scriptures. This attitude is described as the vilest kind of ingratitude, which deserves the most severe punishment. The speaker asserts that this punishment is already being delivered, as man is suffering. He concludes by questioning the origin of love, suggesting that people should investigate where it comes from, implying its roots are in the very religious and spiritual traditions they disrespect.