Acharya Prashant addresses the issue of children going astray by questioning whether they were ever shown the right path in the first place. He states that parents often offer their own life paths as an example, which children reject, saying they do not want to become like their parents. The child then chooses any other path except the one their parents followed. He explains that if a child is not given something meaningful, they will be drawn to superficial things, like pop songs about physical attraction. All foolishness and illnesses in a child, he argues, originate from the home. If they are not coming from home, they are coming from the television, which the parents brought into the house. If a daughter idealizes Barbie, it is because she was never introduced to figures like Joan of Arc. Responding to a question about the societal emphasis on security, Acharya Prashant clarifies that the issue is not about whether security is needed, but whose security is being sought. He distinguishes between the security of the 'I' (the self) and the security of one's resources. He explains that 'I' am not my resources; 'I' am separate from my car, my body, and even my reputation. These are all external resources. To accomplish meaningful work in the world, one needs resources, and it is practical to keep these resources safe and secure. However, the 'I' itself does not need security from external conditions; it is inherently secure, independent, and free from dependency. The speaker points out that the fundamental problem is the identification of the self with its possessions, or the coupling of 'I' and 'mine'. When this identification happens, the loss of a possession is felt as a loss of the self. True security, he explains, is to decouple the self from its resources. This means that even if all external possessions are lost, the self remains untouched and secure. This is the security that needs to be taught to children. Parents should be able to tell their children that their performance might be flawed, but their love for them is unconditional. This provides the child with inner security, knowing that their core being is loved irrespective of their external successes or failures. Without this understanding, children will inevitably be attracted to the superficial offerings of the market and media, as they have not been introduced to anything of real value.