Acharya Prashant explains that life is experienced moment to moment, and therefore, the purpose of life must be related to one's lived experience. He advises one to ask, "As I am living, what is it that troubles me?" Finding a solution to the core of one's troubles is the only purpose of life. The troubles of your life, if you look at them clearly and honestly, will tell you the purpose of your life. He uses the analogy of sitting on an uncomfortable chair to illustrate that abstract ideals are meaningless when one is facing immediate, personal problems. The ultimate purpose is to gain freedom from everything that keeps you small, to challenge your limits, and to overcome your bondages, as freedom is our essential nature. To attain freedom, one must first identify their bondages. Acharya Prashant warns against getting entangled in superficial problems, which he calls deceptions that hide the "mother problem." The real task is to delve into the core of suffering to discover this central problem, which is a fundamental weakness or limitation. If you know your central problem, your purpose is to overcome it. If you do not know it, then your purpose is to figure it out. This means confronting the root cause of all suffering, not just its various symptoms. In response to a question about feeling like a failure even after achieving a planned success, Acharya Prashant states that this occurs when goals are not chosen carefully. If your goals are dictated by others, their attainment is not your success; it belongs to the one who set the goal, making you a mere servant. In such a situation, your failure is your failure, but your success is not your success. Therefore, one must not randomly adopt targets. The right goals must be closely related to your internal condition, chosen after deep introspection and honest self-assessment. When you undertake a worthy challenge that is truly your own, even failure in it is a form of success.