This Is The Way

God Bless them all.

Traditional Housewives.

What the Losers try and disparage by calling TradWife.

There is more, she posted a reply to those who would look down on her and her kind that includes the above video and more.

Her name is Estee Williams and the extended version is the one I tried for a half hour to post but it is on a different site and it absolutely refuses to post or embed.

Go see what she has to say because IT IS THE WAY.

Of course it doesn’t hurt that she is cuter than a button and built like a brick shithouse but still, good on all the ladies out there who are choosing to return to their roots.

There may be hope after all.

33 thoughts on “This Is The Way

    • As long as she stays in the kitchen I’m afraid. Tik Tok = high maintenance brain damage.

  1. A rare breed today.
    Let’s hope real women make a comeback, I’m sick of all these narcissistic dipshits.

  2. Seems more and more women are just acting slutty (nip slips, braless, wet t- shirt) kinda stuff.
    Now don’t get me wrong, I’m not opposed to a glimpse of more than I’m supposed to see, but I find a well dressed pretty lady a whole lot sexier and desirable than the half naked, tat covered sl**s all over the internet and TV screen.

  3. Somewhere out there is one lucky son of a bitch to have found a doll like that,
    .

  4. Phil, any hints, apart from having a far higher income than I’ve ever had, on where and how you get one of those?

  5. My first wife was this way. Man I loved her. She passed away twenty years ago. Remarried ten years later, what a mistake. Young fella, if you find a woman like this woo her with all your heart.

  6. Met my wife at UCLA. I am an Electrical Engineer and she was in Finance. We got married after college and when the kids came along 7 years later we set down and discussed what we were going to do, have them raised in day care or if she would give up her job and stay home. She became a homemaker and raised our two sons.

    She would not go back to work until my company promoted me and sent me to the East Coast and my boys were just entering their teens. I would be spending time in Northern Virginia but also traveling to setup offices around the world. At this point she went back to work in Finance.

  7. You boys and your nostalgia for June Cleaver! Nothing says traditional like silicone and no wedding ring. Her job is content creator/influencer. She is lucky that she doesn’t have to go to an office.

  8. She is a lucky woman if she can stay home. A lot of homemakers had to go get a job back in the 70s during Carters inflation because the households could no longer live on one income. Now we have FJB economy with rampant inflation. Do you really think all the women working outside of the home want too? They have to or the bills don’t get paid. Then when they get home they start their second job, cook, clean, ldy etc. Been there, done that.

    • They could have stayed home, as some did, but they preferred to live beyond their means. 40 years later they are still doing so. Do try to catch up.

      • The head of household (husband/man) income is what needs to catch up with inflation which is almost impossible. It’s not always about living within your means which I do highly endorse. Life happens, I have watched good people get clobbered by unexpected events and then the wifey unit has to get a job to get them through the tough times. I can tell you the sweet tart in the video above costs money.

  9. I don’t know if you menfolk are aware of the intense pressures on young women to pursue a career outside the home, whether they want one or not. It was bad when I went to college (back during the Nixon administration) and it has to be about a hundred times worse now. I never had any desire for a career outside the home, but I was under constant pressure to have one anyway. My sister never forgave me for not taking the career path she thought I should take, and neither did my father, and as for my professors, don’t get me started. I wonder how many other young women just caved in and took the path of least resistance because they didn’t want to disappoint everyone (the way I did).

    • Bob, my wife and I, when we got married, sat down and decided that raising a family was Job#1, and everything else was secondary. It was a tough row to hoe to live on just my earnings, sometimes, but we did it with minimum complaints (as we looked longingly at others’ houses and toys) and powered through it. Our 49th Anniversary is in 10 days, and we DO NOT regret what we have done.
      My Church teaches, “No other success can compensate for failure in the home.” If you realize that raising children is THE most important job a woman (or a man, sure) can do, you’re halfway to Heaven. Doesn’t mean the road will not be bumpy, washed out, snowed over, etc..

      Society has suffered for it, such is life.

      • Before my husband and I got married, everyone said we would never be able to make it on his income alone. Their saying that it couldn’t be done made me even more determined to prove that it could. We’ve been married for 45 years and I have never held a paying job. I’ve done tons of volunteer work, in addition to gestating, raising, and homeschooling four kids, but my husband has always been the sole breadwinner.

        Still waiting for an apology from all the people who told us it couldn’t be done….

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