Since the war in Sudan erupted, the narrative surrounding Sudanese women has centered on the immense hardships they have endured from systemic sexual violence to mass displacement. The conflict has shattered the country’s socio-economic and political systems, of which social reproduction- including provision of care work to children, the elderly in the family, through all housework and outside work which is related to both the reproduction labor power and the socialization of society, all of which serves as a fundamental pillar (defined more clearly below). While highlighting women’s suffering remains crucial and this article, to some extent, does the same, we go further to argue that understanding both the impact of this crisis on women and their response to it requires moving beyond framing care in place of social reproduction, or as merely a neutral, passive, or “harder” or more ‘exploitative’ process under duress. Instead, we must examine how the crisis itself reproduces conditions that give rise to new and specific methods of performing this labor of care. These methods generate new learning and tensions while simultaneously responding to them all in service of the broader, relentless goal: the reproduction of life and labor.