Acharya Prashant explains the fundamental difference between human creation and divine creation. He states that humans create out of a sense of incompleteness and a desire to become whole, whereas the divine creates because it is already complete and eternally at peace. Human creation is often a one-time event driven by restlessness, but divine creation is a continuous, timeless process of creativity that happens every moment. While humans always have a purpose or a motive to gain something through their actions, the divine has no purpose because there is nothing left for it to achieve. He compares divine creation to a child's dance, which is performed out of inherent joy rather than a desire for a specific result. Acharya Prashant further emphasizes that true creation or 'Nishkam Karma' occurs only when an action is purposeless and free from personal desire. He suggests that anything created with a specific motive is limited by the smallness of the human mind. Real value lies in actions that arise from a state of bliss and love, where one is not seeking a particular outcome. By working without a fixed goal or worry about results, one opens themselves up to 'surprise gifts' that are beyond human imagination. He concludes that life's true joy is found when one immerses themselves in the act of doing and allows the results to unfold naturally, leading to a state of being that is far more magnificent than anything one could have planned.