Acharya Prashant emphasizes that excluding the Bhagavad Gita from education leads to lifelong slavery. He highlights that even historical figures not primarily known for spirituality, such as Subhas Chandra Bose and armed revolutionaries like Rajguru, Sukhdev, and Bhagat Singh, founded their core principles on the Gita. He notes that while Bhagat Singh is often portrayed solely as an atheist, he was a voracious reader with a deep love for spiritual scriptures. Acharya Prashant asserts that no true revolution is possible without the Gita and that greatness in any field requires a spiritual foundation. He clarifies that spirituality is not about rituals, traditions, or specific clothing, but rather the opening of the mind and the awakening of consciousness. He describes spirituality as the education of the self and the study of the mind, incorporating elements of psychology and neuroscience while focusing on the ego's urge for liberation. This liberation is described as the highest form of love—the ego's love for its own liberated state. He concludes that true bigness in life is the prerogative of the self, which the Upanishads describe as infinite and limitless.