Acharya Prashant addresses the concern of being unable to stop worrying about results despite knowing one should not. He explains that the concept of a 'result' is a programmed idea, and its definition can be altered. He illustrates this with an analogy: people anticipate the 30th of the month because that is when the paycheck arrives, making the date seem important, though it has no intrinsic value on its own. To change this focus, he suggests imagining a scenario where one gets paid daily. In such a case, the 30th of the month would lose its special significance. Similarly, one must challenge the notion that a final outcome holds a unique, inherent value. The key is to change the definition of the result. He advises redefining success as the act of excelling at every point within the process. If a process has thirty steps, one should not be concerned only with the final, thirtieth step. Success, then, is determined daily. If one performs well today, they have succeeded, and the act of doing well is its own celebration. This mental shift requires de-programming, as both biology and society have conditioned us to focus solely on the endpoint. One must educate oneself to value the entire chain of actions, recognizing that each step is as crucial as the last. The final outcome does not yet exist; what truly exists is the present moment, where one has the power to act. He concludes with the analogy of climbing a steep mountain: a serious climber focuses on their immediate next step, not the distant peak. Those who are truly committed to their goal are not preoccupied with thinking about it; they are engrossed in the immediate action.