For fourteen years, a mother has watched her son navigate the challenges of apraxia, understanding the unique sensory irritations that disrupt his peace. When her son, overwhelmed by the sudden emergence of body hair, chose to shave for relief, she saw only a simple act of self-care—a small victory in his calm, resilient demeanor.
But what should have been a moment of understanding ignited a fierce storm at home. The father’s harsh judgment, rooted in rigid ideas of gender norms, clashed painfully with the mother’s empathy and the son’s quiet struggle. In this family’s fragile balance, a son’s need for comfort became a battleground for acceptance and love.

AITA for supporting my 16 y/o son’s (who has a sensory condition) decision to shave his body hair but my husband is against it?






As renowned developmental psychologist Dr. Dan Siegel explains, “Emotions are signals and choices that connect us to what matters most.” In this situation, the mother’s action was driven by the signal of her son’s sensory distress, prioritizing his emotional and physical comfort. The father’s reaction, however, seems driven by a strong emotional signal rooted in deeply ingrained societal scripts about gender presentation. Apraxia often involves sensory modulation challenges, meaning the tactile sensation of body hair can genuinely cause distress, making the shaving an essential self-regulation tool rather than a mere preference.
The father’s response introduces external, socially constructed rules (“only girls shave”) directly into a situation that should be centered on the child’s internal experience and diagnosed needs. Telling a child their self-soothing behavior is “weird” can damage self-esteem and undermine the parent-child trust established by the mother’s initial support. Furthermore, the father dismisses the medical context (“don’t make excuses”), which invalidates both the son’s experience and the mother’s supportive role.
The OP’s action to support her son’s sensory needs was appropriate given the medical context. The constructive recommendation is for the parents to engage in a non-confrontational discussion away from the son, focusing on the medical justification for the grooming choice rather than the grooming itself. Future handling of such situations requires both parents to align on validating the child’s sensory reality first, before considering external social perceptions.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.


























The original poster (OP) is facing a conflict between supporting their son’s sensory needs, which led to the decision to allow him to shave body hair, and their spouse’s rigid adherence to traditional gender norms regarding male grooming. The OP feels that alleviating their son’s discomfort should be the priority, while the spouse views the action as inappropriate and is imposing negative judgment on the son.
Given the clash between sensory accommodation and traditional gender expectations, the core question is whether prioritizing a child’s documented sensory comfort outweighs a parent’s insistence on strictly adhering to conventional gendered grooming standards. Where should the boundary lie between sensory regulation and social conformity in parenting?







