In response to a question about the practical way to seek greatness, referencing the Chandogya Upanishad, Acharya Prashant explains that there is only a practical way to greatness; practice is the way. He defines greatness as the rejection of everything petty about us. The path to greatness, he states, is to actively and continuously reject the little and the small that pervade our daily lives. This involves locating these elements and dropping them without attachment, feeling, expectation, or fear. Acharya Prashant addresses the questioner's concern about being a Westerner contributing to a mission primarily based in India. He points out that great masters like Ramana Maharshi and Nisargadatta Maharaj were served by Westerners, suggesting that nationality is not a significant barrier. He explains that while Indians might bring their 'Indianness' to the work, someone from a different context brings something that may not be readily available locally. He encourages the questioner to figure out the existing gaps and how he can contribute, emphasizing that the work is not even at 0.1% of the required scale, leaving ample scope for everyone who wants to pitch in. This 'figuring out,' he stresses, must be done by the contender himself. Using an analogy, he compares the situation to being a tenant in a house with an expiring lease; one would not invest heavily in repairs. Similarly, one should not invest in the current self that needs to be dropped. The sooner one 'shifts out' of the old self, the better, as resources are needed for the new. He asserts that the greater the dislocation, the greater the benefits. He acknowledges the challenge of taking the teaching to the West, where it must start from scratch, but affirms readiness. He notes that the West has been 'colonized' by the wrong kind of spirituality from India and thus needs a 'detox dose' even more. He frames the challenge as a game of money versus determination, stating that while others may have the money, 'we' have the determination. He encourages the questioner to treat this as his own project and find a way to make it happen.