Acharya Prashant explains that the greatest pleasure nature offers, lust, makes the whole world dance, from animals to humans. However, he urges one to observe the state of being after moments of lust. He states that many women, and men too, have experienced that they feel most humiliated after moments of lust, as if they have been used and discarded. Although there is pleasure for both men and women in that moment, it is followed by suffering. The speaker clarifies that he talks about suffering because it exists, and it is necessary to talk about it to eradicate it. Just as one cannot treat a disease without talking about it, one cannot be free from suffering without addressing it. In response to a question about why an unliberated person should strive for liberation when only one in millions succeeds, Acharya Prashant explains that the unliberated person is not concerned with the probability of success but with the extent of their own suffering. One's own suffering is the motivation, not mathematics or the sorrow of others. He further elaborates that what people call pleasure is an illusion. If one finds pleasure in something, they should indulge in it completely to see its true nature. The speaker says that pleasure is never truly obtained; it is a delusion. If it were real, one would want to loot it entirely, but going closer to it reveals its hollowness, like a balloon that bursts. He quotes Kabir Saheb: "People call false happiness real happiness, and their minds rejoice in it. The world is but a snack for Time, some in its mouth, some in its lap." He explains that we are deceiving ourselves by calling suffering pleasure. Spirituality is not against happiness; it is for infinite, eternal, and real happiness. The goal of spirituality is the complete annihilation of suffering. The problem is not with seeking happiness but with mistaking false happiness for the real thing. He uses the analogy of a wedding where all the arrangements are present, but the bride and groom are missing, implying that worldly pleasures lack the essential element of true happiness.