Acharya Prashant addresses a questioner who feels a lack of motivation to work after earning enough money for his survival and feels he is wasting his time. The speaker explains that when one becomes accustomed to being sick, health feels unfamiliar and unsettling. The state the questioner is describing is actually a sign of supreme health. He has enough money for his basic needs—food, clothing, and shelter—and feels no desire to work more or engage in other activities. This, the speaker states, is liberation, and the questioner is complaining about it. Acharya Prashant elaborates that when we suppress our real complaints, which are about the inauthentic aspects of life, then the authentic itself becomes a complaint. He advises the questioner not to complain but to express gratitude for this state, as it is a state that most people do not get to experience. This state is one where you are not doing anything, nor do you feel like doing anything. He refers to the 'Ajgar Gita' (Python's Gita), which is based on the principle that a python does not work for a living, and a bird does not work. This is the 'Ajgar Dharma' (the way of the python). Those who act, suffer the consequences; as you sow, so shall you reap. If you have no desire to reap, then why labor to sow? The feeling of wasting time arises from societal conditioning that one must always be busy and progressing. When everyone around is engaged in some activity, being idle feels strange. He further explains using the Shiva Sutras, citing 'Udyamo Bhairava' (Effort is Bhairava/Shiva), which means that whatever action you take should come from the heart, from Shiva. If the heart says there is no need to move, then that is the right action. Action that arises from the heart is like a dance, full of charm, simplicity, and rhythm. Let Shiva dance, not you. The speaker recounts an incident with a European friend who, after decades of searching, realized that peace is simply being empty, not even the experience of peace. This friend was about to leave but stayed upon realizing the value of what he had found. It is not enough to find something valuable; one must also value it. People often receive such gifts by chance but then discard them. Acharya Prashant concludes by explaining that it is more important to value what you have received than to receive it in the first place. Truth, when it comes, will always arrive through some illusion or dream. When Truth appears, one must let go of the dream and hold onto the Truth. The mind's nature is to seek peace, but its way of functioning is not peaceful. The mind and the soul are different. The mind, through its trickery, turns even the soul into an object like itself.