Acharya Prashant explains that there are no big changes. The ego misses change because it wants big, quick changes, as it is fed up with itself. It wants the "real fat one," but there are only little ones. Every step one takes is a potential change; in fact, it is the only change possible. Every small thing that you do is the only place where change can happen. Even the so-called big changes are enabled only by the small ones; without them, the big ones remain just a dream and are not actionable. What one can act upon is immediate, straightforward, and small. The ego's logic is to question the point of taking one small step when the destination is a thousand miles away. While its calculation is correct that one step is insignificant compared to the total distance, there is no other option because there are no big steps. Every step taken will be commensurate with one's size. One can dream of long jumps, but that does not happen in reality. Since you are small, your steps will be small. Therefore, one must take care of the baby steps, the little things, and the little tasks. The immense lies in the smallest, and this is where we lose—not to a giant devil, but to the "little mischief-maker." The ego wants to fight great battles but does not realize it has been losing everything to this mischief-maker. The troubles that seem cataclysmic and earth-shaking are born out of small, petty mistakes. These mistakes are easy to commit when one is obsessed with the big. The speaker assures that there is nothing called "the big"; in our world, everything is small. The more one finds oneself in big problems, the more one should realize that the way out is small action.