Acharya Prashant addresses the contradiction between the Bhagavad Gita's teaching on detachment from outcomes and modern concepts like visualization of positive results. He argues that popular spiritual bestsellers often stoke greed and imagination by encouraging people to visualize their desires without questioning the validity of those desires. In the modern world, personal desire is often treated as absolute and sacrosanct, leading people to chase physical pleasure or mental happiness without investigating whether the object of desire is truly needed or worthy. This focus on visualization is merely an appetizer for blind desire, which reinforces personal limitations and leads to disastrous outcomes. In contrast, Shri Krishna teaches a different dimension of realization where one must do what is right rather than what is desired. Acharya Prashant explains that right action is fresh and new, making it impossible to visualize because visualization requires past experience. Right action demands total immersion, courage, and surrender, leaving no energy to worry about the fruits of labor. He emphasizes that if the action and motivation are right, the result will inherently be right, even if it does not align with one's personal likes or dislikes. The focus must be on investigating one's desires and choosing the right battle, which is always impersonal and dedicated to a greater cause rather than limited self-interest.