Fathers Were Never Lazy and Heartless

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June 25, 2026

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A new report from the American Institute for Boys and Men confirms what most of us should have already observed: fathers today are more engaged than ever.

Since 2019, men have significantly reduced their paid working hours while sharply increasing the time they devote to childcare and housework. Post-pandemic data shows dads driving a fresh wave of “gender convergence” in how couples divide their time, with college-educated fathers in particular cutting paid work by about six hours a week and adding more than four hours of care and household labour.

False ‘Lazy’ Dad Narratives Remain

Yet the cultural narratives remain stubbornly unchanged. Television shows, social media memes, and endless opinion pieces still paint men as lazy at home, checked-out partners, or emotionally absent providers. The misguided message is clear: fathers may show up with a paycheck, but they don’t really show up for their families. It’s time we retire this caricature and start celebrating today’s dads, and the ones who came before them.

The truth is that fathers were never lazy and heartless. The idea that men throughout history treated family as an afterthought is a modern myth that flattens the reality of male sacrifice. For centuries, men have physically crippled themselves to provide. They descended into coal mines, worked on factory lines for 12-hour shifts, marched off to wars, built roads and bridges, and worked dangerous trade jobs so their families could have food and shelter. These weren’t ego-driven careerists chasing status. They were husbands and fathers who deeply loved their families and measured their worth based on their family’s security.

Today’s working fathers who don’t get enough time with their families carry the same ache. In my conversations with husbands and dads who work long days, the story is consistent and heartbreaking: they feel guilty about every hour spent away from home. They miss bedtime stories. They lie awake wondering if their children will remember them as present or preoccupied.

One friend, a successful business owner who provides well for his family, recently told me, “I cut my hours as much as I can now to be present, but I still feel like I’m failing them, and I’ll never get that lost time back.” These men have hearts. They have feelings. The cultural story that dismisses them as emotionally stunted or indifferent is unfair and flatly untrue.

The Damage of the ‘Lazy’ Myth

The myth that fathers never really cared didn’t emerge from nowhere. Some of it stems from legitimate frustrations with mid-20th-century households, where rigid gender roles left women shouldering the bulk of domestic work while the outside world became more luxurious.

The absent father narrative was amplified by media that found the “bumbling dad” trope or the “Mad Men” angle easy and profitable. Much of it stemmed from messaging framed around getting girls and women ahead in education and the workplace. Whatever its origins, the narrative has calcified into something damaging. It tells young women that men are inherently unreliable partners and portrays women as victims of burdensome familial obligations.

Worse, it tells young men that their natural drive to protect and provide is suspect and insufficient. And it leaves both sexes bitter towards each other rather than grateful for the complimentary ways they love.

Changing the story about fathers matters more than we think. When we acknowledge the historic physical sacrifice of men, we restore dignity to the provider role without diminishing the equally vital contributions of mothers throughout history. By recognizing that today’s fathers are actively choosing more time at home, we create space for honest conversations about how families can thrive in our modern world instead of pitting mothers and fathers against each other.

This is not a call to return to the 1950s or an attempt to pretend every marriage had been perfect. It’s about telling the truth so we can build better relationships between the sexes.

Women who see their husbands as willing, capable partners rather than reluctant helpers report greater satisfaction and less resentment. Men who feel their efforts are seen experience more motivation to engage fully at home.

Healing the fractured relationship between men and women begins with rejecting lazy stereotypes. Looking at the data, listening to today’s fathers, and honouring the devotion of those who came before us are good places to start. Fathers have never been heartless. They have been carrying invisible loads of responsibility, pressure, and love, expressed through provision and protection.

Retiring the myth of the lazy, heartless father will free men from unfair judgment and prevent women from feeling unnecessary bitterness. If we do so, it will open the door to something far more beautiful: genuine appreciation, mutual respect, and the kind of harmonious familes that children deserve.

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Image via Pexels.

Lisa Britton

Born in Nova Scotia, Canada, Lisa Britton grew up the youngest of five children. Lisa attended school in both Halifax and rural Hants County. Once she graduated at 16, she attended Saint Mary’s University then made the courageous move to relocate to Los Angeles in the US where she pursued her writing, contributed to international publications, worked within the Hollywood fashion industry and then became aware of major societal issues concerning true gender equality.

Lisa is now actively fighting for families, valuing the sexes equally, and taking a special stand encouraging boys and men, recognising the need to reduce the negative impact of fatherlessness on our girls and boys, and leading the way to true male and female empowerment. Lisa champions fathers and the mental health, education, and well-being of boys and young men. She believes the breakdown of the natural relationship between men and women is the root cause of many societal issues today and has made it her life’s mission to make positive change.

Her tireless efforts have brought her to Washington, DC and have attracted attention from influential leaders, with her work shared by members of Congress, presidential candidates, a First Lady, and even the President of the United States.

Lisa also has a passion for cooking and food photography, and you will find her on weekends cooking Sunday suppers for her family and friends.

Follow Lisa’s work on Substack here.

Born in Nova Scotia, Canada, Lisa Britton grew up the youngest of five children. Lisa attended school in both Halifax and rural Hants County. Once she graduated at 16, she attended Saint Mary’s University then made the courageous move to relocate to Los Angeles in the US where she pursued her writing, contributed to international publications, worked within the Hollywood fashion industry and then became aware of major societal issues concerning true gender equality.

Lisa is now actively fighting for families, valuing the sexes equally, and taking a special stand encouraging boys and men, recognising the need to reduce the negative impact of fatherlessness on our girls and boys, and leading the way to true male and female empowerment. Lisa champions fathers and the mental health, education, and well-being of boys and young men. She believes the breakdown of the natural relationship between men and women is the root cause of many societal issues today and has made it her life’s mission to make positive change.

Her tireless efforts have brought her to Washington, DC and have attracted attention from influential leaders, with her work shared by members of Congress, presidential candidates, a First Lady, and even the President of the United States.

Lisa also has a passion for cooking and food photography, and you will find her on weekends cooking Sunday suppers for her family and friends.

Follow Lisa’s work on Substack here.

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