Acharya Prashant explains that the human brain is a product of time, composed of memories, past events, and experiences. Because the brain is time, it has an overwhelming desire to continue into the future, which is defined as security. This desire for security arises from the brain's inherent insecurity and fear of annihilation. The brain seeks security in two forms: physical security of the body and psychological security. While physical security involves maintaining the body's existence through food and safety, psychological security is the desire to exist even after the body is gone. This urge for psychological security is the primary reason humans produce children; it is an attempt to ensure one's continuation after death. He further notes that this behavior is observable in all living organisms, from single-celled amoebas to animals, which prioritize eating for physical security and reproduction for psychological security. Acharya Prashant points out that there is a correlation between insecurity and reproduction, suggesting that more insecure or impoverished populations often have higher birth rates. From a social perspective, he argues that people often have children out of loneliness or a lack of purpose, following a societal mandate of marriage and reproduction to bring excitement back into their lives. He concludes that while animals act on pure physical conditioning, humans have the option of intelligence to transcend these insecure impulses, though this intelligence often remains dormant.