Sadhguru also questioned the way many women describe themselves as “just a housewife,” arguing that the phrase itself reflects how deeply society has begun to undervalue caregiving and motherhood. Recalling conversations he has had with women over the years, he said he often asks them why they reduce such an important role to the word “just.”
“You don’t seem to understand the significance of being able to nurture two or three new lives,” he said.
For Sadhguru, motherhood is not a secondary responsibility or an informal domestic role. He described raising children as serious, full-time work, especially for women who consciously choose to devote themselves to building a stable and nurturing environment for their children. In his view, caring for and shaping young lives should never be dismissed as ordinary housework or treated as less meaningful than a professional career.
Too often, women who stay home are made to feel as though they are not contributing enough, as though nurturing children and building a stable emotional environment somehow counts for less than a salary or title. Sadhguru rejected that idea directly. To him, a mother is not simply reproducing. She is, in his words, “manufacturing the next generation of people.”
It is a striking phrase, but the point behind it is even stronger. The world of tomorrow, he said, will be shaped by the kind of mothers we have today. In other words, the emotional atmosphere a mother creates, the patience she offers, the values she passes on, and the stability she provides all have consequences that stretch far beyond the home.


