Acharya Prashant addresses the question of why ignorance appears prevalent while saints seem rare in human history. He explains that intelligence is man's true nature and that every person is essentially a saint. He suggests that there are saints who appear as such and others who are simply waiting to appear, describing the latter as postponed or deferred sainthood. He emphasizes that waiting is merely the unnecessary postponement of the real thing and that time is the only factor separating one from their true nature. Acharya Prashant asserts that figures like Kabir Saheb or Buddha are not rare because their essence exists within everyone; for instance, when a person sings the songs of Kabir Saheb with fondness and experiences peace, they are Kabir Saheb in that moment. He encourages the listener to stop scheduling their peace for the future and to allow sainthood to manifest in the present moment. He concludes that the peace one feels during moments of sanity is what beckons all the time, and one should respond affirmatively to it so that life becomes increasingly full of that peace.