Acharya Prashant explains that there is a petty part within you that says, 'I want to dominate your life, that I want to be expressed, that I want to become your breath, your action.' And there is the great within you, which is parallely saying, 'I have a right to be expressed.' He states that one must feel the call of that great, otherwise they would not have sought guidance. If you had wanted to remain petty, you would not expose your pettiness. There is so much within you that is beautiful and healthy, and that too wants to lead you, take you places, and make you live an alternate life. He questions why one does not give that a chance. To illustrate this, he shares a story about a grandmother telling a child that we all have two wolves inside of us, a black wolf and a white wolf, and they are always fighting. They are growling, hitting each other, trying to overpower each other, and they hate each other's guts. The child interrupts and asks, 'Granny, which of these wins?' The grandmother smiles and says, 'The one you feed.' Acharya Prashant then asks which wolf the listener is feeding and why. He asserts that the right wolf has an equal right, is equally yours, and probably much more yours than the wrong wolf. He concludes by urging, 'Both the wolves are within you. Feed the right one, please.'