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Why Are Daughters Asked To Serve Tea? 10 Everyday Home Chores That Quietly Teach Misogyny To Kids And Adults
Ever noticed how aunty automatically calls the daughter to serve tea while the son continues watching TV, unbothered and unbothering? Or how grandma beams when the girl folds clothes "without being asked"? These little scenes may seem sweet, even normal. But plot twist: they're also training ground for patriarchy.
In many Indian households-progressive, modern, nuclear, or joint-the tiniest, everyday home chores are coded with silent gender instructions. Boys are "helping" when they do something once. Girls are expected to just know. And these seemingly "normal" domestic routines? They're low-key creating a blueprint for lifelong misogyny.

Let's decode the top 10 home tasks where sexism hides in plain sight.
1. Serving Tea (A.k.a. Daughter's Welcome Duty)
The classic. Guests arrive, and within minutes, someone yells, "Beta, chai le aa zara!" It's rarely the son. The girl is being silently trained that serving others is her future role.
2. Folding Laundry Is A Girl's Talent
Ask any mom who they "trust" with laundry folding-and it's probably the daughter. Boys get praised if they don't crumple socks into a ball. Girls are expected to fold like FabIndia staff. Quiet double standard? Definitely.
3. "Help Your Mother In The Kitchen"
This line has been passed down generations. Not "help your father." Not "both of you." The girl learns early: the kitchen is her territory, and boys are optional visitors.

4. Laying The Table-But Only If You're Female
From a young age, girls are told to set the plates, bring water, and ensure the table looks nice. It's called manners for daughters. For sons, it's not even considered.
5. Cleaning Up After Family Meals
Who clears the plates after dinner? Hint: it's not the one with remote in hand. Girls are trained to clean silently. Boys are trained to keep sitting.
6. Birthday Parties = Girls Do Decor, Boys Eat First
Daughters are made to blow balloons, set out samosas, arrange chairs-and still wait till the men are served. Boys? They arrive late and dive straight into the cake.
7. Ironing Dad's Shirts Is "Good Girl" Training
Ever heard "just learn how to iron papa's clothes, it'll help after marriage"? Because apparently, pressing shirts is prep for wedding vows. Boys are rarely asked to learn this.
8. Fetching Things For Elders
Nani asks for her specs? The daughter runs. Dadi needs her shawl? The daughter again. The son? He's always "busy with something." The message: girls must be always accessible.
9. Being "Nice Host" While Boys Chill
During family visits, girls are taught to greet elders, serve sweets, offer water, and smile. Boys? They're usually hiding in their rooms gaming. And no one bats an eyelid.
10. Sewing, Stitching, and Sanskaar Bootcamp
From sewing buttons to hemming school uniforms, girls are expected to "know these things." They're part of the great sanskaari checklist. Boys? "Arre, he'll buy another T-shirt."
It's 2025, and while we've got tech startups and daughters becoming CEOs, we're still handing them trays of chai while sons scroll Instagram. These gendered micro-tasks shape how children view themselves and others. If you're raising kids, or simply living with someone else's, notice these quiet rituals.
Because every time a boy is allowed to sit while his sister serves chai, patriarchy brews a little stronger.



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