Acharya Prashant advises a seeker who wishes to resign from a stable banking job to pursue a higher purpose of serving others. He emphasizes that while the goal should be chosen from the heart, the path and resources to achieve it must be determined by the intellect. He warns against acting solely on emotional impulses, stating that a high goal requires high capability and practical planning. One must constantly assess their actual strength and resources, such as time, money, and energy, rather than living in a fantasy. He explains that the higher the goal, the greater the responsibility to use one's intelligence to bridge the gap between current capacity and the requirement of the mission. Acharya Prashant further clarifies that true renunciation or leaving a job becomes effortless only when one is drawn by something significantly greater. He compares the pursuit of a great goal to climbing Everest, which demands extreme alertness and constant vigilance. He stresses the need for a 'cool' and enduring passion rather than a momentary, explosive one. He uses the metaphor of the heart's beating versus the feet's running; while running is visible but temporary, the heart's beating is quiet, invisible, and continuous throughout life. He encourages the seeker to maintain this steady, long-term resolve and to work tirelessly with full sincerity and intelligence to fulfill their noble objective.