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He’s raising kids, not egos

Hashini Kavishtri Kannan

There is still something quietly radical about a man who does what women have done for generations – the invisible, endless work of care.

HE makes the kids’ breakfast before I’ve even had my coffee.

While I rush out the door, bag in hand, he’s already packing school bags, coaxing our daughter to brush her teeth and checking emails between bites of toast.

Somewhere between the rice cooker and Microsoft Teams, he’s redefining what it means to be a man.

We weren’t raised to imagine men like him.

The “ideal husband” once meant the breadwinner – the man who left early, came home late and complained about traffic over dinner.

The one who never changed a diaper, who may “help” with the dishes on weekends but still needed applause for it.

But my husband is a different kind of man – the kind who knows exactly where the spice powders are kept, which detergent works best on school uniforms and how to calm our seven-year-old autistic daughter when the world feels too loud.

He works from home but that phrase doesn’t quite capture it.

He lives from home and holds the household in his two hands, balancing deadlines and dishes, client calls and chicken curry.

While I go out into the world chasing stories and headlines, he is the one keeping our small world intact.

Sometimes people ask – half out of curiosity and half in disbelief: “So your husband doesn’t mind staying home?” I smile and say: “He minds the dishes, not the titles.”
There is still something quietly radical about a man who does what women have done for generations – the invisible, endless work of care.

He does it without resentment and without theatrics.

When our daughter has a meltdown, he doesn’t raise his voice.

He waits, breathing with her, matching her rhythm until she feels safe again. He is the one who decodes her moods, translates her silences and understands her world in ways words can’t reach.

Our son, 10 and curious, once asked, “Why is Amma always working?” Before I could answer, my husband said gently, “Because Amma is building a future for you and your sister.”
That is what I mean when I say partnership.

It is not about keeping score or taking turns; it is about two people standing in different rooms of the same house, holding up the same roof.

And he is not alone.

Across Malaysia, more men are quietly redrawing the boundaries of masculinity – men who cook breakfast before school runs, attend therapy sessions with their children or manage households while their wives go to work.

They are not “househusbands” or “helpers”; they are fathers, partners and equals – fully present in their families’ lives.

Still, the world hasn’t quite caught up yet.

There are jokes, raised eyebrows and casual disbelief that a man could take pride in domestic life.

Old habits die hard but change has a way of seeping in quietly, one home at a time.

These men, like my husband, are dismantling the old blueprint of masculinity that equated worth with salary and strength with silence. They are teaching their sons that gentleness is not weakness and showing their daughters that equality can be lived, not just spoken.

ALSO READ: Juggling, not balancing: Life of a working-class mum

I’ll admit, there are days when guilt creeps in – that modern mother’s guilt that arrives uninvited, whispering that maybe I should be the one at home, cooking rasam and rice, supervising homework.

But then, I come home late and the house smells of sambal and soap, the kids are asleep and my husband is sitting on the couch, eyes tired but peaceful.

That is when I realise: this isn’t a reversal; it is an evolution.

He is not “helping me out”; he is being a parent.

He is not “babysitting”; he is raising his children.

And he does it not because I asked him to but because love – real love – is collaborative.

We keep saying Malaysia needs transformation – economic, political and institutional – but maybe the quiet revolution has already begun.

In our homes, kitchens and living rooms – where men are learning to nurture, listen and show up, not because they have to but because they want to.

My husband doesn’t talk about gender equality; he lives it.

He does the laundry before his next meeting, cooks sambar while attending a conference call and hums his favourite Tamil song while hanging school uniforms to dry.

And in that everyday ordinariness, there is something extraordinary – a man comfortable with himself, building gentleness into his day.

Maybe this is what progress looks like – not men “helping” women but men and women reimagining life together.

Both hands in the same sink, hearts tuned to the same chaos.

So, here’s to the new Malaysian men – the ones who raise kids, not egos; who lead with love, not control and who knows that strength is not in paychecks but in presence.

Because as the world debates change, these men are already living it – one laundry load, one lunchbox and one act of quiet love at a time.

Hashini Kavishtri Kannan is the assistant news editor at theSun.

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