In a dimly lit subway corner in Hangzhou, a young woman clutches a stranger tightly. They do not speak. A timer ticks away five minutes. When it ends, they gently part ways. She hands him 30 yuan—about ₹350—and walks off. In China’s bustling cities, this is no longer an oddity.
It’s a growing phenomenon known as ‘Man Mum’, and it’s quietly reshaping how we understand emotional survival. Here, women are paying men—not for dates or flirtation, but for maternal-style hugs. These are emotionally neutral, physically comforting embraces—offered on street corners, in malls, or discreet public spaces. It’s intimate, but not romantic. Gentle, but strictly platonic. A stranger’s arms become a substitute for something far more intimate—motherly affection. And increasingly, it’s becoming a lifeline for women coping with an emotionally desolate landscape: long working hours, distant families, and a society still unsure how to address vulnerability without shame.
A ‘Man Mum’ is usually a soft-spoken man—perhaps a student, a fitness trainer, or someone with the right blend of warmth, patience, and emotional safety. Booked through apps like WeChat or Xiaohongshu, he represents motherly affection that many women say they lacked growing up, or can no longer access in adult life. What they offer isn’t a romantic connection—it’s a refuge.
While the concept may provoke discomfort, its roots stretch deep into China’s social fabric. Rapid urbanisation has drawn millions into cities, isolating them from family networks. Emotional repression, a cultural legacy shaped by both Confucian ideals and decades of political restraint, means many grow up starved of healthy hugs. Parents often refrain from hugging their children; physical affection is minimal. And then there’s the legacy of the One-Child Policy—a generation raised as ‘little emperors’, burdened with pressure but deprived of emotional expression.
A paid hug, hence, becomes far more than it appears. It’s a quiet rebellion against stoicism. A reclaiming of emotional agency. Particularly for women, it marks a shift: no longer waiting for affection from partners or family, they are choosing to seek comfort on their own terms—even if it must be purchased.
The ‘Man Mum’ isn’t just a service—it’s a symptom. A symptom of deeper emotional deprivation and the desperate, dignified ways people seek comfort. What started as a quiet online request—’Can someone hug me for five minutes?’—has become a mirror held up to the world. A world where technology connects, but hugs elude us.
And yet, this is not solely a Chinese story. In Japan, ‘hug cafés’ offer similar solace. In the United States, professional cuddlers provide non-sexual, therapeutic touch by the hour. South Korea has ‘rent-a-listener’ services where people pay only to be heard. It’s the rise of the emotional gig economy—where presence, warmth, and connection are sold to those who need them most.
India, too, is emotionally stretched—young, urbanised, overworked, and lonelier than it cares to admit. But here, hugs remain cloaked in suspicion. An embrace is either romantic, parental, or patronising, never neutral. Women seeking physical comfort risk being judged or misunderstood, with physical affection often moralised or sexualised. Public intimacy is policed, platonic hugs are rare, and emotional support still comes dressed in spiritual language or filtered through therapy apps. But the hunger remains. Often, even married couples, and especially women, are left craving a normal hug that is not a part of an irregular, mechanical sexual gesture. A hug is both emotional comfort and a reminder that we exist, yet it’s rarely seen as a part of our daily, mechanical lives.
Sociologists warn that we are entering an age of ‘emotional outsourcing’—where care, warmth, and listening are becoming transactions. While some fear this reduces intimacy to a commodity, others argue it’s a form of survival in societies where traditional care networks are collapsing. As China’s ‘Man Mum’ trend spreads, it raises uncomfortable questions about modern emotional emptiness, cultural restraint, and a readiness for marketing ‘affection’. But, in the end, what’s more human than the need to be held—without judgement, without words, without fear? Let’s hug our vulnerable selves, tightly!
