Acharya Prashant states that being a pleasure-seeker is an act of piousness. However, he argues that we are not pious people, not because we seek pleasure, but because we hate pleasure. To be a pleasure-hater, he explains, is to be a chaser of incomplete pleasure. He suggests that instead of saying one is satisfied by momentary pleasures, one should admit to hating eternal pleasure. This is why people coolly settle down with momentary pleasures. If one were truly a lover of pleasure, they would not make peace with the trivial things they call pleasurable, such as psychedelics, drugs, excitement, women, booze, or high-speed driving. The speaker then questions the reality of these so-called pleasures by pointing to their aftermath. He asks what the bedsheet looks like after the night, what the morning is like after the rampage, and what the bottle looks like. He points out that these activities often result in a hangover or a sense of emptiness. After five minutes of sex, one turns their back to their partner and starts snoring. He questions if this can be seriously called pleasure. After all the orgasmic heights, one rushes to the washroom, and the partner hears the flush of the toilet. He asks what pleasure the two are getting in such a scenario. Acharya Prashant clarifies that he is not denigrating these activities on moral grounds but is disparaging them based on their sheer incompleteness, as they do not truly give pleasure. He asserts that life has to be pleasurable, but one must not seek the lowest kind of pleasures, especially when it is known that they do not succeed in fulfilling you. He encourages having some real fun, like a man, not like a baby or a sissy. He concludes that a man must have manly pleasures, stating that "booze and girls are for kids."