Acharya Prashant explains that the world's appeal depends on the size of the void within an individual. He compares the world to a marketplace where shops advertise names and forms; these things only become significant when one has a large internal void. He advises that instead of blaming the world for supplying what we demand, we must live in a way that diminishes this void. Since humans are born with a need for companionship, identification, and purpose, one must choose the right company, a sublime identity, and a great purpose to avoid falling prey to wrong ones. He emphasizes that purposelessness is a pinnacle that cannot be reached through mere talk; instead, one must have an intense and right purpose to avoid petty errands and foolish desires. Acharya Prashant further asserts that labor and suffering are unavoidable in life. He suggests that if one must labor, it should be for the right cause, like a royal elephant rather than a donkey. Right suffering is characterized by the reduction of the sufferer themselves. When the sufferer reduces, concerns that plague others become irrelevant. Freedom from suffering does not mean the world's problems cease to exist, but rather that they become irrelevant to the individual. He concludes that when the world and its adverse situations become irrelevant, one realizes the Vedantic truth that the world is an illusion, as it no longer holds power over the individual's state of being.