Acharya Prashant addresses the issue of personal agency and the unnecessary involvement of parents in the private matters of adult individuals. He argues that adults should decide their own affairs and that accepting external mediation or outsourcing one's life decisions forfeits the right to complain about the outcomes. He emphasizes that while social reformation is possible, the immediate response to encountering lustful or disrespectful individuals should be to disengage and walk away rather than remaining in their presence and complaining. He uses the analogy of choosing produce to illustrate that one should simply reject what is rotten or unsuitable rather than trying to fix the entire system in that moment. He stresses that all wisdom is founded on the right to choose and that individuals must take full responsibility for their lives. He dismisses practices like horoscope matching and concepts like 'Manglik' as nonsensical, advising that if one does not accept such traditions, they should simply reject them without needing to justify their choice or correct society. He points out that an educated woman acting helpless is a contradiction, especially when she is empowered by both education and favorable laws. He notes that external freedom provided by law is useless if one remains internally enslaved by custom, tradition, and ignorance. Acharya Prashant highlights that many highly educated women still live in emotional darkness because they lack internal education and self-knowledge. This lack of internal clarity leads to suboptimal life decisions, destroyed careers, and difficult relationships. He concludes that true internal freedom can only come from self-knowledge, which he identifies as spirituality or Vedanta. He asserts that spirituality is the best friend of a woman, as it provides the internal empowerment and freedom necessary to navigate life effectively.