​Can motherhood and career truly go together? This is what Sadhguru says

​Can motherhood and career truly go together? This is what Sadhguru says
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​Can motherhood and career truly go together? This is what Sadhguru says

The question comes up often, and usually with a quiet weight behind it: can a woman build a career and still be fully present at home? Can she earn, manage, nurture, and hold everything together without losing herself in the process? In a conversation with Juhi Chawla, Sadhguru offered an answer that was less about slogans and more about balance, intention, and the real meaning of contribution. Scroll down to read more....

Juhi Chawla opened the discussion with a straightforward question about modern women stepping out into the world, pursuing careers, earning money, and still managing home life. What followed was a response that challenged the way society often frames women’s choices. Sadhguru’s central point was simple: a woman should do what she wants as an individual, but no one should turn career into the only respectable path. “Every woman should do what she wants to do as an individual person,” he said. That line carries the foundation of his view. Choice matters. Freedom matters. What he pushes back against is the idea that working outside the home is automatically superior to staying home and raising children.

Why Sadhguru says motherhood should not be treated as “just” housework
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Why Sadhguru says motherhood should not be treated as “just” housework

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.

He also suggested that modern society often celebrates visible professional success while quietly overlooking the invisible emotional labour that keeps families functioning. Much of parenting work happens in private, without applause, promotions, or public recognition, even though its long-term impact can shape an entire generation.

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.

The emotional impact of motherhood
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The emotional impact of motherhood

Sadhguru also spoke from personal experience while reflecting on the role his mother played in his life. He said she was not someone who constantly expressed affection through words or repeatedly said “I love you.” Yet her love never felt uncertain because it was visible in the way she lived every single day. “It never even occurred to us to question whether she loved us or not,” he said. “Her whole life was dedicated to us.”

What stayed with him was not dramatic parenting or emotional speeches, but a steady sense of presence. The food arrived on time, the home functioned with care, and there was an unspoken reliability woven into ordinary life. Many children, he suggested, experience love not through performance but through consistency, through the quiet reassurance that someone is holding the emotional structure of the household together.

He went even further, describing the invisible labor of a mother as the “soil” in which a child develops. A mother, he said, can create an ambience without interfering too much, without trying to dominate every part of the child’s identity. That ambience, quiet but powerful, becomes the emotional ground on which a life is built. For him, that is not an insignificant task. It may be one of the most important roles a human being can play.

Why should dignity not depend only on income
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Why should dignity not depend only on income

At the same time, Sadhguru was careful not to turn his view into a prescription for all women. He did not say that women should stay home, nor did he argue that they must avoid careers. In fact, he made room for both possibilities. If there is an economic need, he said, a woman can work. If she has a genuine passion for it, she can work. But he objected to the way society often promotes money-making as the main measure of value.

That part of his argument is especially sharp. In his view, the modern world has become overly economic, and both men and women have begun to measure life through earnings alone. He warned that this reduces human life to procurement, the gathering of things, while neglecting the more beautiful dimensions of existence. Women, he suggested, have historically been associated with those softer, more aesthetic dimensions, but now they too are being pulled into the same narrow race.

Career and motherhood are not enemies
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Career and motherhood are not enemies

His concern was not about ambition itself. It was about the standards society chooses to celebrate. If a woman sings, plays music, cooks beautifully, loves her children deeply, or simply lives with grace, that too is valuable, he said. Life is not made meaningful only by a paycheck. It is also shaped by care, culture, presence, and the small acts that make a home feel alive.

That is where his argument lands: not in opposition to working women, but in resistance to hierarchy. Career is not the only path to dignity. Motherhood is not lesser. And a woman should never be forced to prove her worth through income alone.

The larger message is less about choosing one role over another, and more about refusing false comparisons. Motherhood and career can coexist, but they do not have to be weighed against each other as though one automatically outranks the other. What matters is freedom, context, and the understanding that different forms of contribution carry different kinds of power.

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