Acharya Prashant explains that the primary obstacle to the liberation of women in India is the societal tendency to raise them as 'daughters' rather than as human beings. He argues that parents, teachers, and society must stop emphasizing gender differences, which are biologically minor but socially exaggerated out of ignorance. By treating girls differently through gender-specific toys, expensive clothing, and grooming habits like lip gloss, society conditions them to be body-centric from a very young age. This focus on physical identity turns the body into a toy or a weapon while making the mind numb, ultimately leading to a lack of appetite for anything sublime. He further points out that the fundamental identity and urge for liberation are the same for both men and women, as they are the same species. However, historical male dominance has reduced women to material sexual objects, an idea that women themselves have unfortunately internalized. Acharya Prashant highlights that mothers often play a significant role in confining their daughters to stereotypical feminine roles. He asserts that a woman's primary purpose is her own growth and liberation, not serving a husband, raising children, or being defined by her sexual life. To achieve true liberation, women must discard the body-centered image of womanhood and stop viewing being a wife or mother as their most important roles.