Acharya Prashant addresses a question comparing the teachings of the Bhagavad Gita and the book 'The Secret'. He dismisses the comparison as akin to comparing "fine apples with rotten oranges." He explains that pop bestsellers and neo-spiritual classics like 'The Secret' advise visualizing what you want to get, which he describes as merely stoking the fire of one's greed and imagination. These books, he argues, do not prompt you to question the desire itself—its origin or its worthiness. Instead, they take the desire as an absolute and offer a method to gratify yourself in advance, which only whets the appetite and eggs you on towards the disastrous outcomes of blind desire. In the modern world, desire reigns supreme, and questioning it is considered taboo. In contrast, the teaching of Shri Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita comes from an entirely different dimension of realization. Shri Krishna advises, "Do not go by what you desire. Do what is right." When you chase something you desire, you can visualize the result because the desire is connected to your past experiences and imagination. However, the right action is absolutely fresh and new, not born of the past. Therefore, you cannot know its outcome, making it impossible to visualize. The right action is so demanding and all-consuming that it requires your total involvement and surrender, leaving no energy to worry about the fruits of the action. Acharya Prashant further clarifies that if the action, motivation, and the actor are right, the result is assured to be right, so there is no need to be bothered by it. If you do not like the result that comes from a right action, it is your liking that is not right, not the result. One must challenge their own likes and dislikes. The entire emphasis in Shri Krishna's teaching is on investigating your desire before leaping into action. The right battle is impersonal and for a bigger cause, not for limited personal interests. This great cause, for which one must act, is euphemistically called Krishna. Therefore, to work for Krishna is to work for an immense cause.