Acharya Prashant begins by stating that having the ability to influence young girls is a position of tremendous responsibility. He explains that men corrupt women and then suffer as a consequence, while women remain "womanly" and also suffer. He notes that when we suffer in our relationships with women, we are paying for the sins of history. One way to rightly pay for these sins is by at least not corrupting the young girls anymore. In response to how one should influence a young girl, Acharya Prashant's primary advice is to not influence her at all. However, if influence is necessary, it must be remedial. This means one should only interfere in her life if there is a great need to rectify something that is obviously bad or evil. The way to do this is to introduce her to greatness, giving her glimpses and options of what is possible in human life. This approach enables her to make her own decisions. The speaker clarifies that his position is nuanced. He agrees that men suffer a lot in their relationships with women, just as women do. However, he asserts that this suffering does not come from a particular relationship or person but from centuries of ignorant conditioning and spiritual deficiency that mankind has lived through. This suffering is something we must pass through with decency and dignity. An exhibition of this dignity is to not raise a young girl in the image of mankind as we have known it. To avoid imposing a particular self upon a young girl, one first needs self-knowledge to understand that all selves are false. He cautions against the missionary work of liberating women without first having enough self-knowledge. He warns young men to be very skeptical and cautious of their own intentions, as many who begin by trying to liberate young women end up just fathering their kids. He uses the example of a man acting as a father figure while having impure intentions, emphasizing the need to be aware of one's own motives.