Acharya Prashant explains that India became a fertile ground for religious inquiry due to its favorable geography and abundance. The fertile soil of the Indus and Ganga basins, combined with guaranteed monsoons, provided people with ample food and leisure. This leisure allowed sages and seers to engage in purposeless discussion and silent observation of life for long durations, leading to the insights found in Indian philosophy. He emphasizes that wisdom and insight cannot develop if one is constantly running behind ambitions or living a clockwork life without internal leisure. He advises taking long breaks to stop and recollect what is happening in one's life, as these spaces of freedom are essential for growth. He further notes that while a favorable ecosystem helps, spiritual awakening can also occur in unfavorable conditions, such as the brutal survival conditions of the Arab world. In such environments, the realization that hard work may yield nothing can also lead one to stop and sit in silence. He cites Prophet Muhammad sitting alone on a hill for long durations as an example of how being alone and silent is at the core of insightful realization. Ultimately, religion is born from human dissatisfaction and the inquiry into its cause. This search for the absolute and the infinite is what differentiates humans from animals, and Acharya Prashant concludes that life is wasted if it is not used to search for and meet the absolute.