In response to a question about parents enrolling young children in coaching institutes, Acharya Prashant states that the practice is so obviously foolish that explaining its foolishness is absurd. He says that one can only reveal something that is hidden, but the folly in this situation is already apparent. He suggests that this behavior stems from parents who lack love and use their children as "cannon fodder" to fulfill their own ambitions. He expresses empathy for such children, remarking, "Too bad he was born to such parents." Acharya Prashant explains that society and the law treat a child as the de-facto property of the parents until the age of 18, which makes intervention difficult. He describes the situation as a constant, unrelenting, and subtle violence inflicted upon the child by ignorant parents. The core issue, he points out, is that people become parents far before they attain any mental maturity. He contrasts early physical maturity with the lifelong lack of mental maturity in most people, noting that while a human is physically ready to reproduce at 13 or 14, they possess no wisdom. This leads to them using their children to live out their own unfulfilled dreams, such as forcing them into coding or public speaking classes. He refers to the community of children as the "most wronged" and "most deeply exploited," calling this phenomenon a "continuous holocaust" that is so pervasive it becomes inconspicuous. The only solution, he asserts, is for parents to be trained in spirituality. They must be torn away from their usual preoccupations and engage with wisdom literature or the company of the wise. He believes that if a person truly has love, they would question their readiness to be a parent a thousand times and prepare for the immense responsibility. He concludes that undeserved reproduction is a crime against the child, an act of deep unconsciousness similar to killing. He advises the questioner to begin by initiating a discussion with the parents, but warns that they may react with anger and rejection, as his words are often too much for a beginner.