Acharya Prashant discusses the nature of human restlessness, illustrating it through the example of people who purchase expensive cars with autopilot features but refuse to use them. This refusal stems from a deep-seated need to feel like the 'doer' and a fear that their physical and mental assets are going to waste if not constantly utilized. He explains that humans feel a compulsion to keep their organs and mind productive, leading to unnecessary actions like constant talking, eating, or thinking, simply because they possess the capacity to do so. This behavior is driven by a perpetual feeling of threat and the sensation that time is slipping away. The speaker points out that this restlessness is based on the false promise of an eventual rest in the future. People act under the illusion that they will eventually reach a state of peace or gain something significant that will not slip away. However, he asserts that everything will inevitably slip away and there is no golden future or wisdom waiting to be attained later. He emphasizes that there is no eventual rest to be found at any other point in time. When one truly recognizes that no future rest exists and that their current state is all they have, they can enter into rest immediately by making peace with the present.