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NY Post
New York Post
30 Nov 2023


NextImg:I’m raising my daughter to depend on a man and live a ‘slow life’

Jasmine Dinis is passing down a different kind of tradition to her kids.

The proud stay-at-home mom and self-proclaimed “tradwife” — short for a “traditional wife” who aligns with the dated nuclear family model — revealed that she would be teaching her homeschooled daughter that it’s “perfectly acceptable depend on a man.”

Her controversial take, which was posted online earlier this year, is opposite that of the modern woman, as nearly half of women under 45 are childless, according to a January study.

Instead, Dinis, who boasts more than 46,000 followers, is part of the growing “tradwife” movement that has quickly gained traction on social media, earning 282 million views on TikTok.

In the recent clip, Dinis denounced the progressive lifestyle of career-oriented women, saying that “joy” in life can be found in religion and family, not a job.

@jasminedinis2

In a world full of women teaching their children that their only goal is to go to university, get a good job and make money, I’m teaching my little girl to live a slow life, to be a biblical women that wants a husband & a beautiful family that she can serve daily. That joy comes from God & family, not from a career ????️???? #homesteading #tradwife #motherhood #foryoupage #stayathomemom #conservative

♬ original sound – Jasmine Dinis

“In a world full of women teaching their children that their only goal is to go to university, get a good job and make money, I’m teaching my little girl to live a slow life, to be a biblical women that wants a husband & a beautiful family that she can serve daily,” she captioned the TikTok video, which garnered 1.4 million views and an onslaught of rebuttals in the comments.

This isn’t an unusual sentiment for the Aussie mom — she has shared her journey from an “independent, career-driven woman” to a “housewife that bakes sourdough,” and believes women shouldn’t “run” from being a traditional homemaker.

In addition to a lifetime of submission to a husband, Dinis is also teaching her daughter that “being a homemaker is the number 1 career she should strive for,” she wrote alongside the video.

Dinis explained that she would teach her daughter the ways of a more traditional lifestyle.

Dinis' daughter in TikTok video

Viewers vehemently disagreed with Dinis’ parenting strategy and beliefs.

Aghast users expressed their disagreement and dismay in the comments, voicing their relief that their own mothers taught them “the exact opposite.”

“So happy my mother thaught [sic] me to follow my own dreams and not hers,” one TikToker boasted.

“I’m happy my DAD taught me that I wasn’t born to serve no man,” another agreed.

“Nightmare life,” someone else quipped.

“Girls — don’t depend on anyone else but YOU! you are your own rock, your own foundation, your own future,” advised one person.

“V handmaids tale core,” another viewer noted, referencing the Margaret Atwood novel-turned-Netflix-series.

But Dinis isn’t the only woman ditching the corporate hustle and the prospect of a DINK, or dual income no kids, lifestyle.

25-year-old Estee Williams, who has grown her following by nearly 100,000 since the beginning of the year, doesn’t think women should “compete with men.” In her eyes, a woman cannot juggle both a family and be a “boss babe.”

“We as women have realized we CAN compete with men. Yes, but at what cost?” she told The Post at the time.

The Virginia-based traditionalist pointed to the Christian Bible, which she said instructs women to submit to their spouse and vouches for “gender roles.”

She said: “We are women and we need to embrace that.”