There’s a particular kind of exhaustion modern women feel the kind that doesn’t come from work alone, or home alone, or responsibilities alone.
It comes from the gap between what women actually carry and what men think they are contributing.
Ask most men, “Do you support your partner?”
They’ll say the same rehearsed line:
“Of course I support her. I’m not stopping her.”
And that’s exactly where everything begins to fall apart.
Because somewhere along the way, the absence of abuse became the definition of support.
Not hitting her, not cheating on her, not restricting her suddenly that’s enough to make a man feel like he’s a great partner.
Meanwhile, women are living a completely different emotional reality.

1. The Bar for Men Is So Low, It’s Underground
Let’s be honest: previous generations set men up with the easiest benchmark in history.
If he:
- didn’t beat his wife,
- didn’t scream every day,
- didn’t destroy the house,
- didn’t turn alcoholic,
…he was considered “good.”
So now, the modern man thinks that doing nothing is still better than what the last generation did and therefore he’s already doing great.
Women, on the other hand, have had to evolve.
They’ve had to become more aware, more capable, more emotionally intelligent, more self-reliant, more everything.
Men forgot to upgrade themselves with the same speed.
2. “I’m Not Stopping You” Is Not Support
Support is not permission.
Support is not silence.
Support is not neutrality.
But men think if they’re not holding her back physically, they’re supporting her emotionally.
Women know better.
Support looks like partnership.
It looks like responsibility.
It looks like emotional presence.
It looks like “Let me take some load off you.”
It looks like effort not empty reassurance.
You can’t clap for someone while sitting on your hands.
3. Women Carry the House, the Relationship, and Their Own Emotions
Women today are juggling:
- a full-time job,
- their home,
- their health,
- their family,
- their identity,
- and every emotion in between.
And they’re expected to do it:
- with grace,
- with emotional balance,
- without complaining,
- without breaking down,
- and always with a smile.
Men don’t see this because they’ve never had to experience it.
For them, helping with one chore or one conversation feels like “doing something.”
For women, it’s just one drop in the ocean they manage daily.
4. The Emotional Labor No One Acknowledges
Women are the emotional backbone of most relationships not because they want to be, but because the alternative is chaos.
They’re the ones who:
- initiate difficult conversations,
- handle conflicts,
- remember everything,
- cushion every emotional blow,
- keep the peace,
- absorb unnecessary moods,
- repair everything that falls apart.
If a woman stopped doing emotional labor for even one week, most relationships would collapse under their own weight.
Not because men are bad.
But because they were raised with emotional shortcuts, while women were raised with emotional endurance.
5. When Women Go Silent, It’s Not Strength It’s Fatigue
A woman stops asking for help when she’s:
- tired of repeating herself,
- tired of being misunderstood,
- tired of being told she’s overreacting,
- tired of being strong for too long.
Silence isn’t peace. It’s resignation.
It’s the moment she realises she has to play both roles her own and the one he won’t step into.
She becomes emotionally self-sufficient not out of choice, but out of survival.
6. Women Don’t Want Superheroes Just Equal Partners
Women don’t want men to fix everything.
They don’t want perfection.
They don’t need grand romantic gestures.
They want:
- understanding,
- accountability,
- consistency,
- shared effort,
- emotional presence,
- and the sense that they’re not carrying life alone.
They want someone who reflects growth, not excuses.
Someone whose support is visible, not implied.
Someone who doesn’t wait for her to fall apart before he decides to show up.
7. The Real Disconnect
Men still compare themselves to previous generations.
Women compare relationships to what healthy partnership actually looks like.
Women have grown.
Men are still catching up or worse, thinking they don’t need to.
The truth is simple:
Most men think they’re supportive.
Most women feel completely alone.
And until this gap is acknowledged, women will continue carrying the invisible load quietly, gracefully, and painfully while men remain convinced they’re “doing enough.”
This blog feels so true.. that just reading it brought a sense of understanding to me..❤️ great work