Acharya Prashant questions the human obsession with finding a purpose in life, stating that this drive is rooted in greed and the desire for attainment. He explains that man tends to turn everything, including nature and relationships, into something purposeful and useful, which ultimately destroys their true essence. According to him, anything truly beautiful, such as love or deep listening, happens purposelessly. When an individual approaches life with a specific intention or purpose, they limit themselves to only what that purpose allows, missing out on the vastness of reality. He further explores how the ego operates through selective appreciation and personal preferences. He argues that what people call appreciation is often just the ego choosing what serves its interests. Similarly, interpretation is described as the mind hearing only what it wants to hear. Acharya Prashant suggests that the ego is afraid of purposelessness because it implies there is nowhere to go and nothing to become, which feels like a threat to its existence. He encourages living without a reason, laughing without a reason, and loving without a reason. Finally, he addresses the spiritual search for peace or a return to the center. He posits that the very act of seeking peace establishes that one does not currently have it, which is a false premise. Since the one seeking is the lost one, all their actions to find the center will remain distorted and wayward. He concludes that instead of trying to pull oneself back or achieve a state of peace, one should simply stop the continuous actions of the ego. By realizing that one is not lost and already possesses peace, the need for methods and techniques disappears.