Acharya Prashant explains that Karma Yoga is specifically for those who cannot relinquish the sense of doership. While ordinary actions are performed for a specific, achievable result, Karma Yoga involves setting a goal that is both absolutely essential and impossible to fully attain. This goal must be so attractive and beautiful that one cannot live without pursuing it, yet so infinite that it can never be completely possessed. When the goal is infinite, like the concept of Krishna, the concern for a final result disappears because the pursuit itself becomes the necessity. He clarifies the common misconception that Karma Yoga means doing any work without caring for the result; in worldly affairs like business or medicine, one must care for the outcome. True Karma Yoga applies to the consciousness and its love for the infinite. He further describes Karma Yoga as a state of being perfectly balanced, like a wire stretched between two parallel walls that never meet. It is a battle where there is no option to retreat, yet one knows that a conventional victory is impossible during one's lifetime. In this state, the means and the end become one. For a Karma Yogi, being present and engaged in the struggle is the victory itself, rather than waiting for a result at the end of the conflict. He emphasizes that one should not try to apply this principle to every trivial worldly task, as that would be impractical. Instead, one must choose a central, vital purpose that is indispensable for their existence and dedicate themselves to it, understanding that while they can move toward it, they can never fully capture the infinite.