An ISRO scientist, involved in the Chandrayaan-3 mission, shares how Acharya Prashant's teachings on doing one's best and leaving the rest helped him manage the anxiety and pressure of the mission. He notes that while engaged in the mission, he and his team were focused and experienced peace of mind. However, upon returning to their regular lives, they face confusion and indecisiveness. He asks if taking on such all-absorbing, great tasks is the only way to find this focus and peace. Acharya Prashant affirms that this is indeed the only way. He explains that we live in a world created by society, not in primordial nature. If this man-made world makes an honest person restless, their only recourse is to engage in the work of fixing it. The only work that brings peace is the work of correction. He contrasts the high-level, intelligent, and logical environment of a scientific lab with the illogical, emotion-driven, and belief-based outer world of society and family. He states that one who has tasted the heights of meaningful work cannot live peacefully in the lower-level world outside. This is why a person truly engaged in good work cannot take a holiday or a break. For such a person, height, truth, and goodness become synonymous. He criticizes the common notion of separating truth from goodness, like lying to maintain peace at home. He encourages the questioner to make his high-level work his life, rather than seeking a "work-life balance," which he calls a hellish concept. Acharya Prashant asserts that work should be an end in itself, not a means to earn money for family or desires. The right work is one you would do even without payment, one that has its own dignity and beauty. He criticizes the cultural conditioning that teaches devotion to everything—gurus, parents, idols—but not to one's work. The first reverence must be for one's work. The purpose of life is to become better, rise higher, and dispel illusions, and this is achieved through one's work. If your work doesn't facilitate this, it is useless.