A woman who proudly dubs herself a ‘trad wife’ has shared an insight into her “soft rebellion”, which involves staying home to educate her children, and keep the house in order – often all while wearing a full face of makeup and a dress.
Maria West often shares snippets online of her idyllic-looking life as a homemaker, with her and husband Denis adopting traditional roles in the household.
While 30-year-old Maria stays home cooking, cleaning and looking after their young children, Denis is the financial backbone of the duo, working in real estate.
And while her role involves its fair share of hard work, it’s one Maria often undertakes while donning sundresses and expertly applied makeup.
“I don’t want to look like one of the boys,” Maria, a mother-of-two from Seattle, US, told What’s The Jam.
“Even in the chaos of motherhood, I want to feel soft, beautiful and grounded.
“Being presentable at home matters to me, but not in a vain way.
“It’s about respect, mindset and feeling myself.
“I want to reflect love and care for my home, my husband, and my children – and that starts with how I carry myself.
“Sometimes it’s a full face of makeup and a dress, other days it’s a brushed ponytail and a matching lounge set – but I always try.
“I don’t think we need to look perfect, but I do think we should show up with intention.
“I believe in embracing femininity in how I dress.”
It’s part of what Maria has dubbed her “soft rebellion”.
She explained: “To me, soft rebellion is doing the opposite of what the culture or system expects but doing it with warmth, intention, and joy.
“Some people rebel by taking to the streets – I rebel by choosing a slow, rooted life at home.
“It’s still rebellion, just in a softer tone.
“For example, they raise the price of eggs, so I get chickens.
“They flood the shelves with pesticide-laced food – I make sourdough and source locally.
“They push mothers to outsource parenting – I homeschool with delight.
“They want our kids to sit still, follow rules, and become cogs in a machine – I raise mine to think freely and lead boldly.
“Culture tells women to fear getting left behind, to hustle, to choose independence over intimacy.
“My rebellion is building something with my husband and showing my children that motherhood is powerful, not passive.
“It’s not loud, but it’s radical in its quiet way.”
In recent months, the trad wife community has come under fire, with critics saying the movement is “anti-feminist”.
In one post, which garnered negative attention, Maria clapped back at trolls, saying: “I bake bread in a sundress and cry in eyeliner.
“Pretty doesn’t equal passive, domestic doesn’t equal dull.
“This is my version of power: quiet, beautiful, a little unhinged – welcome to the soft rebellion.”
Maria is no stranger to controversy, and says she has received plenty of criticism over the years due to her lifestyle and identifying as a trad wife.
She said: “Some people assume that choosing home means you’re repressed or small-minded, which is wild considering I’m just over here making soup and minding my own business.
“If empowerment means choice, then this is mine.
“Peace doesn’t need to be loud to be real.
“There’s strength in softness, and not everyone is comfortable with that – but that’s okay.
“To me, [being a trad wife] is not about playing a character or idolizing the past – it’s about building a life that’s rooted, peaceful, and intentional.
“I’m not trying to go backwards – I just value some of the old ways: homemade food, strong family, quiet loyalty.
“I still dream, I still create – I just do it from the heart of my home.”
Maria, who has been with Denis since they were both 16 and married at age 26, says a typical day involves a mix of “home-schooling, baby-wrangling, cooking, cleaning, and pretending the laundry pile isn’t winning”.
She added: “There’s usually a cold coffee somewhere, a half-finished to-do list, and a few soft moments in between where I remember why it all matters.”
When she adopted the trad wife lifestyle, she said she switched her focus to “consistency” rather than trying to be an “impressive” individual.
Maria explained: “I didn’t lose myself – I just stopped chasing things that didn’t fit.
“My legacy is being built in slow mornings, shared meals, and tiny hands.
“I think women have been taught to fear motherhood, like it’s the end of their story.
“But for me, it was the beginning.
“We don’t talk enough about the joy, the depth, and the identity you gain from this role.
“And if anyone still thinks being at home isn’t real work, I invite them to keep a toddler alive, fed, and off the kitchen counters for 12 hours straight – [where there are] no breaks and no bonus.”
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