Acharya Prashant advises that to help a young girl overcome peer pressure, the standards for her life must be set very high. He uses an analogy: when one exercises with 15 kg weights, 5 kg weights cease to matter because the standards have been raised. Similarly, a young girl must be introduced to women who are truly worthy of being remembered. When her internal standards rise to a certain point, she will stop caring for the superficiality of her peers. The speaker emphasizes that one should not let their immediate environment dictate their standards. If a person only has their peers to compare themselves against, they might feel disadvantaged. Instead, these high standards should come from great books, documentaries, and videos, with books being the primary source. He gives an example: if a girl spends a week reading the life story of Marie Curie, she will no longer be able to respect a dim-witted but popular classmate who is admired only for her looks, style, and boyfriends. After being exposed to a great mind like Curie, she will not be able to respect the triviality around her. This is why, he states, education is the real thing. It is crucial to provide young girls with real, solid role models. Otherwise, if one doesn't know what kind of highness is possible, any kind of lowness can become the gold standard. He warns that the environment, especially in school and college, can be dominated by a mediocre but powerful and attractive person who becomes an influential role model, leading others to make wrong life decisions. He calls these influential but mediocre figures "nodes of evil" that must be fought against. The solution is to give the daughter the right role models. Parents should identify great women—scientists, freedom fighters, poets like Sarojini Naidu or Mahadevi Varma—and introduce their daughters to them. While the names of great women in history may be fewer than men, they exist and are sufficient. By introducing young girls to these glorious women, they will be saved from the influence of their immediate, often trivial, environment and will not feel the need to chase boyfriends or get into other nonsense.