Acharya Prashant addresses a question about ambition, explaining that one must first have their own life to live. He states that nobody can be fulfilled by reaching a place that somebody else has reached, as everyone is born differently. What fulfills one person cannot fulfill another. Furthermore, one does not even know if the other person, the so-called success story, is truly fulfilled. The image presented by these individuals is often a heavily curated and edited version of their lives, showing only what they want to show. He questions the worthiness of these role models by pointing out the high rates of suicide, tax evasion, and other crimes among them, asking how one can be so gullible to believe their stories are true. Acharya Prashant defines ambition as basically a desire, and when the desire is big enough, it is called ambition. He asserts that all desires come from our animalistic, biological conditioning. He compares the human ambition for territory, wealth, and partners to the behavior of dogs fighting over territory or monkeys chasing mates, suggesting it is not a new or elevated pursuit but a continuation of an old, animalistic tradition. He questions whether it is possible to live from the energy of love rather than ambition. Ambition, he explains, leads to a cyclical state of motivation and demotivation, whereas love provides constant fulfillment. He urges young people to question whether they want to spend the golden years of their lives pursuing something they might not even tolerate, just for the sake of a future, imaginary fulfillment. He points out that most people live their lives without any real relationship to their work, driven only by ambition and desire, not love. He encourages the youth to create a new life for themselves, a life that is not a borrowed script from the past. This requires being free from the influence of the world and one's own conditioned thoughts and emotions. He concludes by emphasizing that freedom of mind and liberty of consciousness should be the most important values, and that a new life must be created afresh, not by following the old, dangerous script of ambition.