Acharya Prashant explains that man is the only being with a worrying ego, an ego that looks into the future. Other living beings on Earth possess a very nominal and minimal ego. Their wants are immediate and current; they seek food and perhaps sex, and nothing is demanded beyond that. For example, if you give food to any animal, it relaxes and will never worry about what is going to happen next. By our yardstick, we may judge them as pathetic little beings, but for themselves, they are doing perfectly fine. You would not meet anybody in the jungle who is cribbing about the situations. No sparrow would ever say, 'Oh, it is the dark age,' or that things have gone so bad. In the jungle, things are just as they are; nobody is complaining. Animals might get hunted or killed, but they are still alright and carry on. The speaker extends this observation to the entire universe. The rivers, mountains, galaxies, bacteria, and the little things in the oceans are all being taken care of without any 'I' or with very little 'I'. Even among human beings, who have a pronounced 'I', the evildoers, who constitute 99.99% of the human population, are being taken care of. The speaker points out that 99.99% of the Earth's population is non-human and is being taken care of. The great universe, which is just material, is also being taken care of. Even among the 0.01% of humans, 99.99% are fools who are still being taken care of. The existence of God is proven by the fact that even those who deny or disrespect Him are sustained. If you ignore a temple, a celestial lion does not jump from the sky to bite your nose off. Even if you spit in the face of Truth, you will still get oxygen to breathe. The one you are trying to deny is still taking care of you, irrespective of your haughty attitude. He is proving his presence by taking care of you, irrespective of your foolishness. The Guru says, 'The Lord provides sustenance to everyone, then why should you worry, my mind?' This 'everyone' is incredibly broad, encompassing all of existence. Worry is a foolish and unauthorized concern for results and the future. It is an evanescent thought that threatens you with your own mortality. The speaker advises that when worry comes and tells you that you are going to die, you should turn back and tell it, 'You too are going to die. I will outlast you.' Even your worries will not outlast your physical age, while the moon is a billion years old. The ape became a man without worrying, but man, with all his worries, fails to become even an ape. This is a liberating statement, meaning your precious time and energy are to be redeemed from the wasteful act of worrying.