Acharya Prashant discusses the relevance of Swami Vivekananda's mission on National Youth Day, emphasizing that the core struggle remains the same: fighting against conditioning. He explains that the youth are in a unique biological state where they attain physical maturity and energy rapidly but lack the inner maturity and experience to make life-altering decisions. This gap is filled by social, cultural, and biological conditioning rather than true understanding. While the conditioning in Swami Vivekananda's time manifested as physical weakness, illiteracy, and a sense of inferiority under colonial rule, today it manifests as a blind drive for consumption, the pursuit of fame, and a reliance on subjective superstitions that science cannot easily debunk. Acharya Prashant argues that the youth of today would likely resist Swami Vivekananda just as much as the youth of the past did because a spiritual revolutionary's role is to challenge the 'sureness' and 'confidence' that stem from ignorance. He points out that modern youth are often certain about a limited set of career paths and life goals without ever having inquired into why they desire them. This lack of self-inquiry leads to a life of postponed fulfillment, where value is always placed in a future that never arrives. He asserts that truth is not a concept or a principle but the process of dropping the false patterns and beliefs one has acquired by chance. In a dialogue with the audience, Acharya Prashant challenges the notion that following well-trodden paths is the only way to survive. He questions the basis of the 'common sense' and 'obvious' facts that people use to justify their life choices, labeling them as modern superstitions. He concludes that the first step toward freedom is acknowledging that the human brain is biologically prone to quick, cheap, and dangerous beliefs. To live truly, one must be willing to dismantle these bundles of conditioning through sincere inquiry and a refusal to emulate the unexamined lives of others.