Acharya Prashant explains that the desire to overcome anger often stems from a concern for the adverse consequences it has on the rest of one's life, rather than a rejection of the anger itself. He points out that people typically regret anger only because it spoils their reputation, relationships, or decisions, impacting the '23 and a half hours' of their day. However, he argues that anger is not an isolated incident but an output of how one lives during those remaining hours. It is a gross indicator of a deeper malaise, signaling that the entire spectrum of one's life is not being lived rightly. He emphasizes that limited solutions cannot fix anger because it is an organic part of an interrelated system involving one's frustrations, suppressions, and desires. The speaker further clarifies that anger is fundamentally linked to the frustration of desire. When an individual feels incomplete and expects something external to fill that perceived void, any obstacle to that expectation triggers an upsurge of energy intended to overcome it. This process is ultimately self-destructive because the 'hole' one is trying to fill is often a fiction. By placing impossible expectations on others, one ends up punishing oneself, leading to mental and physical disorders. Acharya Prashant concludes by distinguishing between common, petty anger born of personal insufficiency and a rare, compassionate form of resentment that arises from a desire to destroy what is unnecessary or harmful to mankind.