Acharya Prashant addresses the misconception that struggle, pressure, fear, and competition are exclusive to worldly matters like college or business. He explains that people often create a false dichotomy, viewing the worldly plane as a place of immense friction and strife, while imagining the spiritual world as one of pure love, harmony, and bliss. He clarifies that this is not true. If one hasn't understood both realms correctly, they might think that leaving the outer world for the spiritual one will bring relief from all pressures and struggles, but this is an incorrect assumption. The speaker asserts that pressure, struggle, and labor are just as present in spirituality as they are in the world. In fact, while one might get by with minimal effort in the world, spirituality demands a great deal more. Competition also exists in spirituality, but its nature is different: in the world, you compete against others, whereas in spirituality, you compete against yourself. Similarly, the struggle in the world is against others, but in spirituality, it is against oneself. The pressure in the world is to acquire more, while in spirituality, the pressure comes from the useless things one has already acquired, which resist being let go. Acharya Prashant states that all the qualities required for success in the world are also necessary for success in spirituality, along with additional ones like discretion, insight, an inward-looking eye, and devotion to truth. The spiritual world is not an easy path for those who have failed in the outer world; it is, in fact, more difficult because it is honest and allows no room for pretense or dishonesty. The speaker's words are not meant to be a temporary relief from stress but a call to revolution and an inner war. He advises fighting the real, albeit more difficult, inner battle, as it yields genuine benefits, unlike the petty battles of the world which are a waste of time.