My husband quit his high-paying job to be a ‘tradwife’ and he’s great at it — I should know, I used to be one
Cooking, cleaning, corralling the kids — it sounds like the to-do list of a modern-day Cinderella.
But, instead, that’s stay-at-home dad Kerry Johnson’s new daily routine. In September, the Utah father of six permenantly logged off from his high-paying job — which forced him to work 60-hour weeks — to live the life of a “tradwife.”
And not only does the millennial former health care administrator of nearly two decades love his new role as “tradhusband” — he even credits the Mr. Mom-like move with saving his marriage.
“I take a lot of pride in being a homemaker,” Kerry, 39, told The Post. After being laid off from his 9-to-5 last fall, he decided to ditch corporate America all together. “I’m able to provide for my wife and kids in this new way — I get to ensure that they’re going out their door as their best selves.”
Going from being the breadwinners to bread-makers, husbands like Kerry are joining the likes of buzzy, busy traditional (or “trad”) wives Ballerina Farm’s Hannah Neeleman.
