Quits job to look after husband, men must be spoilt by wives

Dhaka, Sept 30 – Katrina Holte, 30, quit her job to start a whole new life in September and now spends her days cooking, cleaning, dusting and making her own clothes.Katrina Holte gets up every morning at 6.30 am to lay out her husband’s clothes before heading downstairs to make him breakfast and prepare a packed lunch for him to take into the office, reports Mirror.
She then spends her day cleaning, doing laundry and ironing before starting preparation for the couple’s evening meal, which is always cooked from scratch and on the table on time.
But her average day is very, very different to a year ago after she quit her job to become a full-time 1950s inspired housewife to look after her engineering manager husband, Lars, 28.
Katrina, 30, used to work in a busy payroll department but decided to give up her career in favour of a vintage lifestyle after being worn down by the day to day stresses of an office.
“I feel like I’m living how I always wanted to. It’s my dream life and my husband shares my vision.
“It is a lot of work. I do tons of dishes, laundry and ironing, but I love it and it’s helping to take care of my husband and that makes me really happy.
“My husband is very appreciative of what I do.
“He grew up in a house where he helped his mum with the cooking and the cleaning, so he is not domineering in any way. He’s the most gentle person I have ever met.
“If I did, heaven forbid, have dinner late, he would not make a fuss, but I can tell it means a lot to him that it’s normally on time.
“He looks tired when he comes in from work, so when the table is set and decorated and the candles are lit he relaxes. He’s happy for the evening.
“I think a man needs his wife to make him feel spoilt every once in a while.”
Katrina has taken her role as a traditional housewife to the extreme and wears 1950s dresses she’s made herself.
She’s also filled her home with 1940s-style furniture in the living room and has a traditional bedroom.
She said: “I can feel like I was born in the wrong decade, especially when I look at everything that is happening in the world now. I feel like I belong in a nicer, more old-fashioned time. But I know everything happens for a reason and it is God’s will that I’m here now.
“I agree with old-fashioned values, like being a housewife, taking care of your family, nurturing the people in it and keeping your house in excellent condition, so everyone feels relaxed.”
A part-time seamstress for 10 years, Katrina, who sells her retro frocks across the world, said: “My new life started in September 2018, after I left my job, which was starting to wear me down. I was getting tired and I wasn’t living up to my own expectations.
She said: “I spoke to my husband and told him I want to be a housewife and he said that was fine with him.
“It was a fantastic feeling when I quit. I can do what I want to now and run my house as I want to run it. Now I’m a full-time homemaker.”
Her day starts at 6.30 am when she wakes and sets out her husband’s clothes, ready for the day ahead, before preparing his breakfast and making him a packed lunch.
After her own breakfast, she does 15 minutes of vintage exercises.
“Exercise in the 1930s to 1950s was a lot gentler. There was a lot of stretching, warming up or ‘limbering up,’ as they would say back then,” Katrina explained.
“I have a vintage slant board, which is a small wooden ramp, to do core exercises like sit-ups. I do them for about 10 to 15 minutes a day and they keep me in shape to fit into my 1950s dresses.
“We have the idea today that we have to push our bodies to the limit, but in the 1950s the attitude was simply that you had to take care of it.
“After my exercises, I will go upstairs to take my shower and put on a full face of vintage makeup. I use vintage products like Pond’s cold cream and Revlon red lipstick and have well-drawn eyebrows, as well as using traditional hot rollers to curl my hair.
“My entire wardrobe is the 1950s, made up of dresses I have made myself from original patterns. I always try and look my best.
“I feel most like myself when I’m wearing a vintage-style dress. They are so flattering and I love the colours and fabrics. I just feel happy when I put them on.
“I will then spend a good hour doing the laundry, dusting and sweeping and making sure everything is clean and tidy. I make sure everything is kept in its place.
“After lunch, when my house is tidy and smelling fresh, I will go upstairs and sew either for myself, for my customers or to try out new patterns.”
Katrina starts cooking the dinner at around 4 pm to 5 pm to make sure everything is ready when Lars returns from work.
“I usually cook recipes from the era like pot roasts or chicken pies and make sure there are vegetables,” she said. “In the 1950s, housewives liked to make sure all the food groups were there.
“When Lars gets home he likes to hang his own coat up, which I don’t mind. I read in a 1950s book that if a man wants to hang his own coat up, you should not feel like it makes you a bad housewife.
“I give him a glass of water and if dinner is not quite ready, a plate of snacks like cheese, dried fruit or nuts.
“After dinner, we play board games like Scrabble or watch our vintage shows like I Love Lucy or The Donna Reed Show. Sometimes we read. I like reading 1950s cookbooks and vintage beauty and sewing magazines.”
Shunning modern music and television, Katrina listens to classical music or artists like Frank Sinatra and Doris Day on her vintage record player.
When not in use, the television is hidden away, so as not to mess up the vintage look of the room and the couple do not watch cable or streaming channels.
But Katrina insists her lifestyle is her choice, and nothing to do with her husband.
She said: “He would never expect this from me, though, it was entirely my idea to live like this. It’s always been my dream since I was a little girl.
“In a way, Lars is serving me, because he makes a lot more money than I do and he knows this is what I want to do in return.
“He works very long hours and makes my dreams come true, so I try to make his come true, too. It’s an equal partnership.
“I’m outspoken and I’m definitely not a repressed woman.”
Far from feeling that women in the 1950s were under the thumb, Katrina insists they were independent thinkers.
She continued: “I read some statistics from the era that said 30 per cent of all married women had a job. They were not chained to the kitchen sink, they could go and do what they wanted to do.
“I think we, as women, should support each other. If a woman says she wants to be a homemaker, we should not say that’s not right. What’s right for me might not be right for someone else. We all have to do what’s right for ourselves.
“I met my husband at a dance, so it was quite an old-fashioned way of meeting. If I had lived in the 1950s, that’s how I would have liked to have met someone.”
But Katrina insists her lifestyle is her choice, and nothing to do with her husband.
She said: “He would never expect this from me, though, it was entirely my idea to live like this. It’s always been my dream since I was a little girl.
“In a way, Lars is serving me, because he makes a lot more money than I do and he knows this is what I want to do in return.
“He works very long hours and makes my dreams come true, so I try to make his come true, too. It’s an equal partnership.
“I’m outspoken and I’m definitely not a repressed woman.”
Far from feeling that women in the 1950s were under the thumb, Katrina insists they were independent thinkers.
She continued: “I read some statistics from the era that said 30 per cent of all married women had a job. They were not chained to the kitchen sink, they could go and do what they wanted to do.
“I think we, as women, should support each other. If a woman says she wants to be a homemaker, we should not say that’s not right. What’s right for me might not be right for someone else. We all have to do what’s right for ourselves.
“I met my husband at a dance, so it was quite an old-fashioned way of meeting. If I had lived in the 1950s, that’s how I would have liked to have met someone.” – UNB