Acharya Prashant explains that most parents lack self-knowledge and life education, leading to the differential and often harmful treatment of daughters compared to sons. From a young age, girls are subjected to continuous cues that make them body-centric, such as being told to cover up even when unnecessary or being assigned domestic chores while boys play outdoors. This focus on the body turns the girl into a caricature with a numb mind and no appetite for the sublime, resulting in the unfortunate stereotype of being physically attractive but intellectually dull. He emphasizes that this condition is not natural but is actively manufactured by a society that is body-identified. He asserts that men and women are the same species with the same fundamental urge for liberation. However, historical male dominance has reduced women to material sexual objects for consumption, an idea that women themselves have unfortunately imbibed. Acharya Prashant points out that mothers often play a significant role in confining their daughters to these stereotypical roles. He argues that a woman's primary purpose is not to give birth or serve a family, but to serve her own internal need for growth and liberation. To achieve this, women must reject body-centered identities and the belief that being a wife or mother is their most important role.