Acharya Prashant observes that while nature—including grass, flowers, and animals—exists in a state of contentment without the urge to achieve or change, human beings are plagued by a constant drive for progress, accumulation, and transformation. He asserts that this human-created disease of 'progress' and consumption has led to widespread misery and is now pushing the planet toward total destruction. He points out that the pursuit of economic growth and industrialization is causing irreversible environmental damage, such as rising sea levels, melting glaciers, and the extinction of species, which will directly impact the current generation within their lifetimes. Acharya Prashant criticizes the obsession with GDP and material consumption, noting that the pollution of sacred rivers like the Ganga is a direct result of prioritizing industrial profit over ecological health. He explains that human restlessness stems from an inner emptiness that people try to fill with material goods like furniture and clothes, which fails to provide peace. He warns that parents, living in their own mental darkness, push their children into the same blind race of competition and consumption. He concludes by urging the youth to stop this blind race, reflect deeply on what they truly need, and seek genuine peace rather than following a path of self-destruction.