Acharya Prashant explains that while the Absolute cannot be made a direct target because it is beyond measure, one must strive to move from the small to the relatively large within the world. He emphasizes that spirituality must be practical; for instance, if one considers only three people as their family, they should expand that circle to five, fifteen, or fifty. Progress in the worldly dimension, which is governed by numbers and limits, is essential to demonstrate one's readiness for the infinite. Although the infinite cannot be reached through numerical progress alone, it cannot be reached without it either, as the obstacles to union lie within the individual's attachment to the small. He clarifies that the game of numbers is played on the seeker's side to show their willingness to sacrifice and their receptivity. Using the example of Hanuman lifting an entire mountain, he notes that even the largest thing in the human world is still finite and measurable. Therefore, one should engage deeply in measurable actions—such as increasing acts of charity, compassion, or spiritual practice—to signal readiness to the infinite. He warns against the childish demand for the infinite while remaining stuck in the trivial. True progress involves the expansion of one's heart and actions within the world of forms to eventually enter the realm beyond numbers.