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Wedding Woes

obviously sign him up, therapy for your H

Dear Care and Feeding,

For the last few weeks, my husband “Derek” and I have been at odds over allowing our 8-year-old son, “Noah,” to take ballet lessons. Noah has a cousin who does ballet, and over the Christmas holiday we attended her school’s performance of The Nutcracker. Noah was enthralled and eagerly asked if he could take ballet lessons. Noah is extremely shy and I have been trying to find extracurricular activities for him, so I was very pleased that he would take the initiative. I said we would look into it as soon as the holidays were over.

Then came my husband’s reaction. Derek is adamantly against signing Noah up for ballet. Initially he claimed it was too expensive (which is not the case; we can easily afford it). Then he said Noah would lose interest in it because he has quit baseball and football within the past two years. The truth of the matter is that Derek signed Noah up for both sports over his protests. I reluctantly went along with it in the hope that Noah would grow to like it once he gave it a chance and make some friends along the way. Noah said he didn’t enjoy either sport the entire time he played, but my husband insisted he stick it out because he had “made a commitment.” My husband only relented and let Noah quit after both coaches came to us and said we were wasting everyone’s time because it was obvious Noah didn’t want to be there. Then Derek finally admitted the real reason for his disapproval.

According to him, “ballet is for girls and gays,” and if we sign him up, “we’re going to make him a bullseye for bullies.”

Derek played football from the time he was age 7 through high school and went to college on a football scholarship, so while his response was infuriating, it didn’t entirely surprise me. I replied that there are plenty of famous male ballet dancers, sexual orientation is irrelevant, and what matters is that our son has an opportunity to find something that might bring him happiness, socialization, and allow him to express himself, and he deserves a chance to try it. Derek said it “would be an embarrassment” and if I sign him up, he will have nothing to do with it. Should I sign Noah up for ballet lessons anyway, or is this something my husband and I both need to be on board with?

—Let Him Dance Already

Re: obviously sign him up, therapy for your H

  • A lot to unpack here...but have you ever actually seen a male ballerina? They can seriously throw down on the muscle front in ways I've never seen in a baseball player. 

    Sign Noah up for ballet. Your commitment to marriage was not a commitment to supporting someone's homophobia and inability to confront their implicit biases and toxic masculinity.


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  • Sign him up. 

    But you need to have a conversation with your husband about how he talks about ballet in front of Noah. Because if his disapproves and Will loudly disparage it in front of Noah you need to have a plan for how you’ll counter that. 

    Also your husband sucks. 
  • Your husband is a jerk who needs to sort this out with a therapist.

    I'd be clear to your H that he can feel the way he wants but if he says those things out loud in front of a kid who has made it clear what he wants you're going to have more problems than a kid who wants to play.

    What is his long term plan here?  If the kid actually IS gay is he hoping that delay of dance will keep the kid in the closet?  And is the alternative of preventing the kid from doing an activity he enjoys something that sits well with him?? 


  • Phhft, male ballet dancers are fit AF and professionals have muscles like basketball players.  The straight male dancers I know always have ladies interested in them.

    Sign him up and do all the other things to your husband mentioned here.  Also, the hearty STFU.  

    :smiley:
  • VarunaTT said:
    Phhft, male ballet dancers are fit AF and professionals have muscles like basketball players.  The straight male dancers I know always have ladies interested in them.

    Sign him up and do all the other things to your husband mentioned here.  Also, the hearty STFU.  

    :smiley:
    I'm not straight, but that being said watching a man dance is 10000% sexier to me than watching a UFC fight. The muscles? The flexibility? Throwing around their partner in a fluid and beautiful way? The deeper meaning behind the dance? Sign me up. 


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  • ei34ei34 member
    Knottie Warrior 2500 Comments 500 Love Its 5 Answers
    H is an @ss who definitely needs therapy.  Sign your son up and hoping that H doesn't make him feel bad about it!  
    ExH sent me over when he'd make a big show of letting the DDs paint his nails.  But would then balk if DS wanted his nails done.  Oh I'm sorry are males allowed to have nail polish or not?  
  • Sign Noah up. Period. He’s found something he’s excited about, and as a parent, it’s your job to nurture that. It’s not about ballet, football, or what your husband thinks is “manly.” It’s about Noah finding confidence, joy, and a way to express himself.

    Derek’s take on this is rooted in stereotypes that don’t belong in 2025. Ballet isn’t “for girls and gays”, it’s for anyone who loves it. It requires strength, discipline, and creativity, just like any sport. And let’s be real, kids don’t need ballet to get bullied.

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