There was a time when marriage was considered a sacred bond—one forged in commitment, sacrifice, and yes, unequal but complementary roles. Today, we’re watching that understanding crumble in real time, thanks to the hysterical self-centeredness of fourth-wave feminism.
Just when you think we’ve hit peak absurdity, the feminists come up with something even more ridiculous. The latest buzzword making the rounds in elite media circles? “Mankeeping.”
No, it’s not a joke.
According to The New York Times, “mankeeping” is the unpaid emotional labor women do in relationships. Think things like listening to your husband, encouraging him, and supporting him emotionally. You know—being a wife.
Apparently, that’s now considered slavery.
The Emotional Labor Hoax
Let’s be clear: Feminists are not inventing anything new. They’re just rebranding their narcissism with trendy jargon.
Matt Walsh recently broke this down perfectly in one of his video segments. In it, he mocked the idea that emotional support in marriage should come with a price tag. Under this twisted worldview, a woman listening to her husband talk about his day is unpaid labor. Should he leave $300 on the nightstand for the privilege of being vulnerable with his wife?
Feminists have managed to do what the Soviets couldn’t: turn the nuclear family against itself from the inside out.
A Symbiotic Relationship, Not a Scorecard
Marriage was never meant to be a 50/50 spreadsheet. It’s give-and-take. Sometimes it’s 70/30. Sometimes 90/10. Real marriages are messy, imbalanced, and constantly in flux. That’s the beauty of it.
Your wife might be the social glue that holds things together. She plans the parties, she remembers birthdays, she buys the Christmas gifts. Great. Meanwhile, your husband might carry 100% of the financial burden, stress, and pressure of keeping your family fed and sheltered.
Is that equal? No.
Is it fair? Absolutely.
Equality is not sameness. That’s the great lie modern feminism sells.
Feminism's Bait-and-Switch
What feminism offers women today is a trade. And it’s a bad one.
- Trade meaning for independence.
- Trade family for corporate ladder climbing.
- Trade deep relationships for fleeting hook-ups.
- Trade joy in sacrifice for bitterness in self-interest.
Instead of being honored as the emotional rock of a family, women are being told they’re unpaid workers. Instead of taking pride in nurturing a home, they’re taught to resent it. Instead of seeing their husbands as partners, they’re told to view them as burdens.
This ideology poisons everything it touches.
When Feminism Becomes a Self-Fulfilling Curse
The real kicker? These women adopt the “mankeeping” mindset, start resenting their husbands for needing them emotionally, pull back their affection, and then act surprised when their marriages fall apart.
As Matt Walsh pointed out, emotional and physical intimacy go hand in hand. When women begin to see basic emotional support as exploitation, they inevitably withdraw affection. That’s not a marriage anymore—it’s a roommate agreement.
And what happens next? The man becomes isolated, cold, distant. Sometimes he seeks validation elsewhere, even if it’s wrong to do so. But the collapse didn’t begin with the affair—it began when one spouse decided that caring was a chore.
Marriage Is a Role, Not a Costume
Too many modern women want the title of “wife” but not the responsibilities that come with it. They want the wedding but not the marriage. They want the Instagram photos but not the daily devotion. They say they’ve been “liberated,” but what they really are is lost.
They don’t want to cook.
They don’t want to clean.
They don’t want to offer affection.
They don’t want to raise children.
They don’t want to listen.
They don’t want to be inconvenienced.
But they still want to be called a wife.
Sorry. That’s not how it works.
Men Bear Real, Crushing Burdens Too
Let’s flip the script for a second.
Do you know what 100% of married men carry that no feminist wants to talk about?
The burden of provision.
Men are the default breadwinners in most marriages—by choice or by expectation. They walk through every day with the weight of everything on their backs. Mortgage. Tuition. Groceries. Car repairs. Emergencies. College savings.
And you don’t hear men crying that this is emotional labor.
They just do it.
Because that’s what men do when they love their families.
So when a woman whines that planning dinner or asking her husband how his day was is “unpaid emotional work,” it’s insulting. Not just to her husband, but to the very concept of commitment.
The Feminist Victim Complex
Notice the pattern: no matter who is suffering, women are the victims.
- Men are lonely? Women suffer because they have to listen.
- Men are emotionally stunted? Women suffer because they have to help.
- Men open up to their wives? Women suffer because it’s exhausting.
According to this worldview, women are always the martyrs. And men? They’re just the problem.
It’s exhausting. It’s childish. And it’s dangerous.
You’re Not a Slave—You’re a Spouse
The idea that marriage is slavery is not only foolish, it’s destructive. It rips apart families and replaces love with ledger sheets.
Let’s be blunt: if a woman can’t stand the idea of offering love, support, and emotional connection to her husband, then she shouldn’t get married. Full stop.
Marriage is not a socialist commune. It’s not a contractual 50/50 agreement. It’s a covenant. And covenants involve sacrifice.
If you want a partner, you have to be one. If you want loyalty, offer it. If you want love, give it first.
Final Thought
Feminism today isn't empowering women—it's weaponizing them. It’s convincing them that love is labor, that sacrifice is slavery, and that commitment is control.
But real marriages, the kind that last and bring joy and build strong children and stable societies, are built on something deeper than hourly rates and emotional balance sheets.
They’re built on service.
And if that word sounds offensive to you, then maybe you’re not ready for marriage.
Because the truth is simple:
A good wife isn’t oppressed.
She’s honored.
She’s vital.
And she’s irreplaceable.
And so is a good husband.



