A questioner shares his struggle with addiction, which he feels is an obstacle to his spiritual journey. He works a menial job that leaves him with a lot of free time, which he uses to listen to Acharya Prashant's talks, but he is unable to quit his addiction. Acharya Prashant responds that the problem is not the addiction itself, but that it is a small one; what the questioner needs is a bigger intoxication. He explains that the menial job is the root cause of the small addiction because it provides excessive free time, which leads to mischief. The solution, he suggests, is to become a servant of the great and take up a big job, which contains a much greater intoxication. When the questioner expresses a fear of being alone if he pursues a different path, Acharya Prashant points out the contradiction, stating that if he fears being alone, he should not have asked the question in the first place. Acharya Prashant elaborates that all the questioner's ruminations stem from having too much idle time. The most crucial part of the questioner's statement was, "I do a menial job." The issue is not the job itself, but the ample free time it affords, which the questioner himself acknowledged. This free time is when he engages in mischief. Lacking the desire to do something great, he falls into small addictions. Acharya Prashant clarifies that a "bigger job" does not necessarily mean one with a high salary, but one with a higher purpose. He further explains that every human being lives a small life. We are not inherently born for greatness, liberation, or beauty; nature intended for us to be like animals. The modern conveniences we possess, like mobile phones, create a delusion that we are "somebody." In reality, everything we have, from a simple shirt to advanced technology, is a gift from the great minds of the past. We are living on the mercy and contributions of others. The speaker highlights the dangerous mismatch between having advanced tools and possessing a primitive inner state. The only way out is to engage in work that elevates our consciousness. This requires immense effort, starting with the realization of our lowly condition and feeling gratitude for the gifts of our predecessors. This awareness creates a gap between our current state and the heights achieved by the great, inspiring us to rise. This striving is the "bigger job" and the "bigger intoxication" that can replace all smaller ones.