I came across a video on Facebook this morning. I almost scrolled past it but the numbers stopped me from doing so. It had over 13 million views. Curiosity got the better of me, so I stayed and it turned out unexpectedly moving.
In the video, a teenage boy was bathing his baby sister. She should be no more than three months old. He wasn’t clumsy or hesitant but was careful and very intentional. He handled her with the kind of gentleness and precision you’d expect only from an experienced adult. Washing, drying, applying cream, dressing her, every step done with competence. By the time he finished, she had fallen asleep. Then, he placed her gently on the bed, adjusted her position, and walked away.
And I just sat there thinking, this is what it looks like. Because I’ve heard it too many times. Parents complaining about their sons. How they don’t help, how they act clueless around basic responsibilities and how they believe household care or nurturing is not their job. But then I wonder, where did they learn that because children don’t just wake up one day and decide they are above responsibility. They are taught, directly or indirectly, what is expected of them.
If a boy grows up being excluded from care, from chores, from simple acts of responsibility, why would we expect him to suddenly become capable when he’s older? It doesn’t work like that. Upbringing shapes instinct.
That boy in the video didn’t become that way overnight. Someone taught him. Someone trusted him and allowed him to participate, to learn, to be responsible and now, he knows.
This isn’t about forcing children into hard labor or stripping them of their childhood. It’s about balance. There is a time to let them just be kids, yes, but there is also a time to guide them, correct them, to instill values that will shape the kind of adults they become because it matters. It matters for the home, for the partners they will one day have and for the society we are all part of.
The mother of that boy? She is not alone in her responsibilities. She has raised someone who can step in, who understands care, who doesn’t see it as beneath him. And someday, someone else will benefit from that upbringing too. Because let’s be honest, there are grown men who cannot do the bare minimum. Men who panic over a diaper. Men who hand over their own child at the slightest inconvenience because they’ve never been taught that care is also their responsibility.
Now that doesn’t just happen, it is learned or rather, it is not taught. And then there’s the other side, the influence of the father. If a man strongly believes in rigid, traditional roles, chances are he will pass that belief down to his son. And the cycle continues. That’s why it always comes back to one thing: Home.
What is normalized there becomes second nature everywhere else. And watching that boy today reminded me that raising good men is not a miracle. It is intentional.