Acharya Prashant explains that all your dreams are your limitations. He states that, firstly, they come from the past; secondly, they limit your present; and thirdly, they are going to become your chains in the future. He illustrates this by asking the audience about their childhood dreams, which included becoming astronauts, pilots, and doctors. He then shares his own childhood dream of becoming Superman, which he found deeply fascinating because Superman wears his underwear over his trousers. He points out that while the audience laughs at this now, they have no right to laugh at the dreams of a five-year-old. The speaker argues that just as a 20-year-old laughs at a 5-year-old's dream, a 35-year-old would laugh at a 20-year-old's dream. This is because your dreams can only be as big as the expanse of your mind at that time. A five-year-old's universe is limited to things like policemen, army soldiers, and astronauts, and so are their dreams. To permanently fix your future to a dream from a particular age is to tell yourself that you will not grow any further. If a four-year-old child says they will become nothing but a police officer, they are actually telling themselves they will grow no further. He warns that if you grow further, you may discover a beautiful world beyond the police, but you have already decided. Tomorrow is a new day, and you will grow and learn more, but you will reject that learning because you have already decided on your dream. This is dangerous because tomorrow can shatter your dreams. This leads to living a dead life, chasing a dream from one point in your life and remaining closed to everything that is new. You can only dream of what is in your mind; if you commit yourself to one thing, you will miss out on other fascinating things, which ultimately leads to suffering.