Acharya Prashant addresses the concerns of a mother regarding the frustration and lack of purpose in modern youth. He explains that our idealistic expectations of young people are often misplaced because they are based on exceptions like Shri Swami Vivekananda rather than the biological reality of the human species. He asserts that human beings are fundamentally driven by biological instincts—specifically food, comfort, and procreation—which are at their peak during youth. He argues that nature does not prepare an individual for greatness or liberation, but rather for the furtherance of the species. Therefore, the behavior of the youth, including their focus on self-interest and physical desires, is biologically normal and natural. He further explains that civilization acts as a thin veneer over our primal animal nature. When we force young people to act according to high spiritual ideals without acknowledging their basic instincts, it creates a dark subconscious filled with frustration and anger. Acharya Prashant suggests that instead of imposing motivational fictions or expecting spontaneous enlightenment, we must teach the youth the brutal truth of their animalistic origins. He emphasizes that liberation is not a birthright or a natural occurrence; it requires an external catalyst and a profound, often uncomfortable, intimacy with the facts of one's own savagery. Only through ruthless honesty about one's material motives can a genuine revolt against the biological order occur, potentially leading to true transformation.