Acharya Prashant addresses the critical issue of the safety and survival of Hindu daughters in India, arguing that the real threat is far more severe than what is portrayed in social media or films. He highlights a staggering statistic: over the last twenty years, more than one crore (ten million) Hindu girls have been lost in India, primarily due to female feticide and infanticide. This number is comparable to the entire population of Nepal or Australia. He points out that this mass killing is not being carried out by outsiders or other religions, but by the girls' own parents and families within the Hindu community. This crisis is most prevalent among the educated, urban, and economically well-off middle class in North and West India, particularly in states like Haryana, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, and Maharashtra. Acharya Prashant critiques the hypocrisy of a society that claims to worship women while systematically eliminating them. He notes that the child sex ratio is worst in nuclear families with only one or two children, where parents often kill female fetuses until a son is born. He argues that the root cause is a lack of true spirituality and an adherence to regressive traditions that view daughters as a financial burden or 'paraya dhan' (someone else's property). He emphasizes that education and wealth alone have not solved the problem; in fact, they have provided the technology to facilitate these killings. He also discusses how women are socialized to be 'body-centric' rather than 'consciousness-centric,' leading them to prioritize physical appearance and domestic roles over intellectual and economic independence, which further diminishes their perceived value in society. To address this, Acharya Prashant calls for a spiritual revolution rather than just legal or social campaigns. He urges women to seek strength through 'Atma-Gyan' (self-knowledge) and to strive for total independence—intellectual, financial, and spiritual. He asserts that as long as women are viewed merely as bodies for consumption or domestic labor, they will remain vulnerable. He encourages women to stop seeking validation from a patriarchal society and to focus entirely on their own liberation. The speaker concludes that the only way forward is for those who understand the truth to actively work toward awakening others, moving away from blind traditionalism toward a life based on wisdom and individual strength.