Acharya Prashant addresses a questioner who feels dissatisfied with his corporate job, citing exhaustion and the burden of financial responsibility toward his family. He clarifies that Shri Buddha did not merely state that life is suffering, but also taught that liberation from suffering is possible through right vision, right thought, and right action. He advises the questioner to critically examine whether the money earned is truly for the family's basic needs or for fulfilling their increasing demands and luxuries. He points out that human desires often expand to match income, leading people to view luxuries like business class travel as basic necessities. He warns that when expenses become a barrier to freedom, they are harmful, especially when one becomes a slave to monthly installments for non-essential comforts. Acharya Prashant further explains that the quality of work is more important than the number of hours spent. If the work is meaningful and blissful, one would not seek to escape it or count the hours. He challenges the questioner to be honest about where his income actually goes, suggesting that people often use family responsibility as a moral shield to justify their own lack of freedom. Regarding the lives of saints, he explains that for a true devotee, there is no separation between spiritual practice and worldly work. Saints like Kabir Saheb, Guru Nanak Dev, and Ravidas Ji integrated their labor—weaving, farming, or shoemaking—with their devotion. He emphasizes that devotion is not a specific act performed at a certain time but a way of being that permeates every action, including earning a livelihood.