Acharya Prashant explains that just as Arjun's hell was in his day-to-day activities, our hell also lies in our daily lives. He highlights that Arjun's key quality was his ability to sense the evil in what appeared normal to others. Similarly, we must also be able to sense that there is something "extremely fishy" in what appears normal to others. The speaker cautions against getting into false equations, such as waiting for a literal battlefield like Kurukshetra to call for Krishna's guidance, stating that one will never find themselves in such a situation. He humorously illustrates the absurdity of literal emulation by describing a scenario where an avid Arjun fan acquires a chariot from a defunct circus auction, gathers emaciated horses, and sets off for Kurukshetra with a bow and arrow. He points out that Kurukshetra today is a well-developed urban area, and such a person would be put in an asylum, not even jail. This, he says, is the reward for those who seek to emulate historical events literally. The conditions of the past will never be replicated. Instead, the speaker asserts that one's house is Kurukshetra, one's workplace is Kurukshetra, and one's shop and society are Kurukshetra. The real battle, the Mahabharat, must be fought within the context of what appears to be ordinary and normal day-to-day life. It is in this modern battlefield of daily existence that one truly needs the guidance of Krishna and the wisdom of the Gita.