Acharya Prashant responds to a question about finding pleasure in suffering, referencing the quote, "Keep getting beaten, keep getting up." He clarifies that there is no pleasure in suffering itself, but rather in the struggle against suffering. Suffering is an unavoidable reality of life. The choice one has is not whether to suffer, but how to respond to it. One can either kneel before suffering in helplessness, in which case suffering still remains, or one can struggle against one's condition, which also involves suffering. He advises choosing the latter, the "higher suffering" of struggle. He explains that the quote "Keep getting beaten, keep getting up" means that since being born ensures one will be beaten, one must learn to be beaten in the right fight. The focus should not be on winning, as that is not guaranteed, but on ensuring the fight is right. The joy is in the fight itself, not in its outcome. The real victory is in not turning your back on the right struggle. He critiques the common paradigm of seeking victory, which often leads people to choose smaller, insignificant battles they can win, rather than engaging in the right, more challenging ones. To play the game of life freely, one must abandon the hope of winning. Acharya Prashant redefines victory in the context of life's continuous battle. Unlike other games where a winner is declared at the end, in life, victory is determined moment by moment by not giving up the right fight. The true victory lies in the act of repeatedly getting up after being beaten. He concludes that bliss is not the absence of suffering, as suffering is an inescapable part of life. Instead, bliss is found in establishing a healthy relationship with suffering. The real joy is to be found amidst suffering, not by waiting for a future, suffering-free day. This is the real pleasure, distinct from superficial, escapist pleasures that lead to unconsciousness.