Acharya Prashant explains that people of all age groups come to meet him. He gives an example of elderly people who complain about their son. They say they provided him with the highest education and all comforts, but now he has settled in Canada and does not care for them. He has not come to India in three and a half years and only wants to communicate via Skype. Acharya Prashant then questions these parents, asking how their son, who comes from a middle-class background, managed to progress so much and reach Canada. The parents proudly respond that they gave him the right values. He asks what values they gave him. They say they taught him that the highest value in life is success and that he should leave everything else behind to pursue it. They taught him not to pay attention to other things and to focus on his career's progress. Acharya Prashant points out that the son is doing exactly that. This poison, he says, was created by the parents themselves. They taught him that the only value in life is career, success, and money, and not to pay attention to anything else. Now, why should the son pay attention to them? He elaborates that the parents taught their son that there is no need to know what is happening in the world, what life is, what birth and death are, what spirituality is, or what society is; instead, he should just prepare for engineering. They told him to leave everything, and they would feed him milk and almonds to keep his body strong. So, he is moving towards success. Why would he come to a backward country like India for two old people? In Canada, he has success, money, and a career. The parents themselves taught him to pursue success and a career. The son was born innocent; the parents filled him with this poison. Now that the same poison is being poured on them, why do they feel pain? The son was not born chanting 'Canada, Canada.' The parents taught him these things. They wanted him to not care about the whole world, but to care for them because they are his parents. Acharya Prashant explains that this is not how it works; values are values, they don't make exceptions. When you teach someone that humanity is nothing and success is everything, they will not care for their elderly parents on humanitarian grounds. Acharya Prashant concludes that unless you are spiritual, you cannot be good parents. Without knowing what a human being is, how can you decide the course and direction of a person's life? A person who does not understand themselves, who has never done introspection, who has never contemplated life, will turn out to be a very bad parent. He urges people to turn towards spirituality, if not for themselves, then for the sake of their love, for their children, and out of their responsibility towards them. It is your responsibility because you brought them into this world. If you bring someone into the world and cannot give them an upbringing that saves them from suffering, you are a criminal towards that child. To ruin someone's life by giving them a hollow foundation is a crime of what category? There is no punishment for this in social laws, but the law of existence is different. There, you get punished.