Acharya Prashant addresses a questioner's confusion arising from the statement, "Life is not about what you do, it is all about how you do it." He refutes this idea, calling it completely false, misleading, dangerous, and a sign of great ignorance. He explains that for anyone who understands action (karma), the doer (karta), and the yoga of action (karma yoga), the matter should be clear. To illustrate his point, Acharya Prashant presents an example: if someone were to murder a person with great skill and excellence, the 'how' would be perfect, but the 'what'—the act of murder—is heinous. According to the flawed quote, this act would be justified, which is absurd. This demonstrates that the primary importance lies not in 'how' an action is performed, but in 'what' action is being performed. The statement is the exact opposite of the truth; the entire importance is in what you are doing. He further clarifies that if 'what' you are doing is right, then the skill of 'how' to do it will follow naturally. Conversely, if the 'what' is wrong, then perfecting the 'how' only makes the action more dangerous. When a questioner brings up the phrase "Yogah Karmasu Kaushalam" (Yoga is skill in action), Acharya Prashant warns against taking such phrases out of context from scriptures. He explains that this skill applies only to the *right* action, the one that leads to liberation. Shri Krishna, who gave this teaching, also specified which actions are worth performing. All other actions are misdeeds (apkarma) or wrong actions (vikarma) and are not worth doing, let alone becoming skillful at them. Acharya Prashant concludes by pointing out that people, including housewives, often take pride in trivial skills like making perfectly round rotis or ironing clothes perfectly, while neglecting the fundamental aspects of life. This pride in trivial skills prevents them from learning what is truly important. The real disaster is not knowing the fundamental things of life, which is a state where a mountain of problems has already fallen upon you.