Acharya Prashant explains that while society exploits women extensively, it also keeps them adorned and equipped with comforts and conveniences. A woman is considered the honor and dignity of the house, so she is kept well-equipped with comforts. You would rarely see women from affluent households walking in the sun on the streets. However, it is possible that no matter how much she is exploited inside the house, even if she faces domestic violence, it will happen in an air-conditioned room. If she is raped inside the house, it will be on a mattress worth one or five lakh rupees. So, she will get all the comforts, and her fair face will not be harmed, but her mind might be corrupted. This situation is a bit contradictory. On one hand, men deeply exploit women, and on the other, they also load them with jewelry. The jewelry shops are not selling men's jewelry. A woman has to make a choice. She will get both jewelry and exploitation together. If she does not want exploitation, she will have to leave the jewelry and mansions as well. Those who are greedy for mansions should also be ready to be exploited. Those who have made their identity as 'a respectable woman from a high-class family' should be absolutely ready for high-class people to exploit them thoroughly. One should not bring sentimentality into this whole issue. Do not say, 'I have so much love for my relatives that I am bound by love.' This is not about love; it is about the long car and the three-ton air conditioner. If you step out, you will have to breathe the dust of the streets, and your fair complexion will turn dark in the sun. You will have to switch from a Toyota to a scooter, and that too on installments. The speaker humorously contrasts the luxurious lifestyle, with its various toiletries like different shampoos, face washes, body washes, conditioners, olive oil, and aloe vera paste, with a simpler life using just coconut oil, which is multipurpose. He concludes that the entire wardrobe full of toiletries and shoes is the real bondage.