Acharya Prashant encourages the audience to question the fundamental structures of their lives that they usually take for granted. He urges people to ask 'absurd' questions about the necessity of a home, the concept of family, and the societal pressure to respect specific individuals like parents or siblings. He challenges the conventional definitions of progress and growth, pointing out that people often accumulate wealth far beyond their needs without ever questioning why they want more. By observing the exhausted faces of people in evening traffic, he asks if this mechanical existence is truly the meaning of life and work. He suggests that the current education system, for which people pay high fees, often leads to a life of being 'assaulted' by routine and stress. He explains that true inquiry is not about finding a final answer or a solution, but about the dissolution of the inquiry itself through deep attention. He advises looking at life as if one were an alien visiting Earth for the first time, noticing the absurdity in everyday things like the weight of steel in cars or the specific ways we wear clothes. He points out that our language and habits fragment reality into separate parts, such as dividing the body into a head and a neck, whereas existence is actually a single continuity. Using the example of bees and flowers, he illustrates that everything is interconnected, and it is only the conditioned mind that creates the illusion of a separate individuality. He concludes by warning against chasing buzzwords like success, reputation, and power, noting that most people’s desires are identical and conditioned by society, leading to a life of 'clean violence' and exploitation.