Acharya Prashant begins by giving an example of car advertisements, questioning if one can find a car model advertised without a female model next to it. He explains that the signal being given is that if you have this car, you will get a woman like her to sit in it. He then provides a historical example of Japanese soldiers during the Sino-Japanese War. To keep their motivation high, they were given 'pleasure girls'. The soldiers were incited to fight and defeat the Chinese, and at night, the same Chinese girls were sent to them. These girls were called 'pleasure girls'. The speaker argues that if a physical relationship is established after some other matter is given the number one priority, there is no problem. However, the body cannot be the number one thing, as that would be akin to the behavior of dogs and pigs. He states that there is no other reason for relationships to break; in 80-90% of cases, it is because the sexual center is no longer strong. He asserts that even if one is doing this for pleasure, that pleasure will not be found on the path of dogs and pigs. Quoting Kabir Saheb, "Childhood was wasted in play, and youth was spent under the control of women," Acharya Prashant explains the natural progression of life. When one is young, the body says to play, which is necessary for the body's growth. This is seen in the young of most species, who are playful. This is not just in humans; the young of any species, be it an elephant, lion, or rabbit, are always doing something. This is nature's way of making them exercise. A young child will play, and only then will their body grow. Similarly, an older child will play with a woman, and only then will the family's size grow. This is the process of nature. He clarifies that 'woman' here has two meanings. If spoken to a man, it means the opposite gender. If spoken to mankind in general, it means Prakriti (nature). The issue arises when the woman, or the opposite gender, becomes the number one and only thing in life. He emphasizes that one's highest priority determines all other priorities. If the number one priority is something other than the Truth, then all other actions are driven by that lower priority. The ultimate trophy for all achievements becomes the 'trophy wife'. He concludes by stating that there are two centers in life: the wisdom center and the physical center. A spiritual person does not abandon the Truth for the sake of the body. By keeping Truth as number one, they attain both Truth and the true joy of the body. In contrast, a worldly person, by prioritizing the body, loses both the Truth and the real joy of the body.