When Hair Feels Like the Hardest Part
Supporting Dancers Through Hair Day Meltdowns Without Losing the Plot

If you’ve ever found yourself negotiating a ponytail like it’s an international peace treaty… you are not alone.
For some dancers, having their hair brushed, slicked back, sprayed, pinned, or styled for dance class can suddenly become a major emotional event. And as recital approaches, those reactions sometimes get even bigger.
Cue the tears. The resistance. The dramatic collapse onto the bathroom floor. The “I don’t want to go anymore!” declarations.
We see you.
And while it can feel tempting in those moments to either:
- give up entirely
- avoid the hairstyle
- negotiate around expectations
- or spiral into frustration yourself
There’s actually a really important opportunity hiding underneath the struggle.
Not because the bun itself matters more than your child. But because learning to move through discomfort with support is part of growing.
At Reach For The Barres, we believe children are capable of doing hard things, especially when the adults around them stay calm, clear, and connected.
Sometimes the Hair Isn’t Really the Problem
Of course, some children are naturally more sensitive than others.
But if we’re being honest? A lot of the struggle families experience around hair, dress code, tights, shoes, or recital preparation often has less to do with true inability and more to do with patterns that have quietly formed over time.
Children are incredibly smart.
They learn quickly whether expectations are firm, flexible, negotiable, avoidable, or dependent on how big the emotional reaction becomes.
And when adults repeatedly:
- negotiate expectations in the moment
- remove the discomfort immediately
- rescue children from frustration
- or abandon routines because of pushback
Children unintentionally learn that escalation changes the outcome.
That does not make them manipulative. It makes them children.
Part of our role as adults is helping them understand:
“You are allowed to have feelings. You are not allowed to let those feelings decide everything.”
That lesson matters far beyond dance class.
What Doesn’t Usually Help
When emotions are high, it’s easy to accidentally reinforce the struggle in ways that make future hair days even harder.
Some common responses that often increase the cycle:
- Turning hair prep into a lengthy negotiation
- Repeatedly asking if they “want” to wear their hair up
- Allowing avoidance every time emotions escalate
- Rushing in frustration or panic
- Talking negatively about recital expectations in front of them
- Framing the hairstyle as unfair, embarrassing, or optional
- Adding last-minute alternatives that change the intended performance look
Children take emotional cues from us.
When adults communicate confidence, calmness, and consistency, children are far more likely to eventually settle into the routine.
What Does Help
Normalize It
Instead of treating hair day like an emergency, try:
“I know this part feels hard sometimes. We can do hard things together.”
or
“Your feelings are okay. The expectation is still that your hair needs to be performance-ready.”
Calm confidence matters.
Practice Before It Matters
One of the biggest mistakes families make is waiting until recital morning.
Practice the hairstyle ahead of time. Not perfectly. Not for hours. Just consistently.
A few low-pressure practice sessions can dramatically reduce anxiety because the experience becomes familiar instead of emotionally loaded.
You can even:
- practice after bath time when hair is easier to manage
- let your dancer watch themselves in the mirror
- use a visual checklist
- practice with recital music playing
- or build it into the weekly routine leading up to performances
Predictability helps nervous systems.
Offer Appropriate Ownership
Children often regulate better when they feel some sense of participation.
That might look like:
- choosing between two approved brushes
- holding their own hairspray
- selecting the bow placement
- helping gather bobby pins
- or checking the final look in the mirror
Ownership is different from deciding whether expectations exist.
The hairstyle itself may still need to meet class or recital requirements.
Keep the Goal Bigger Than the Hair
At the studio, hair requirements are not about perfection or appearance pressure.
They serve practical and performance-based purposes:
- helping dancers move safely
- ensuring visibility and uniformity on stage
- reducing distractions during class
- and helping dancers feel prepared and performance-ready
More importantly, recital teaches children something bigger than choreography.
It teaches preparation. Follow-through. Community responsibility. Showing up even when something feels uncomfortable.
Those are life skills.
Boundaries Need Follow-Through
One of the hardest parts of parenting is realizing that once a boundary is set, it has to be consistently upheld in order for children to trust it.
If hair must be up for dance class or performance days, then that expectation needs to remain steady even when there are tears, frustration, complaints, or pushback.
Not harshly. Not coldly. But calmly.
Children feel safest when adults communicate:
“I can handle your feelings, and I’m still going to lead.”
That steadiness builds resilience.
Because confidence is not built by removing every uncomfortable moment. Confidence is built when children realize:
“I felt uncomfortable… and I still got through it.”
Our Encouragement to Families
The recital season can bring out big emotions for dancers and adults alike.
But often, the moments children resist the most become the moments that quietly build confidence later.
The dancer who cried through hair prep this year may very well be the dancer confidently helping a younger sibling with their bun a few seasons from now.
Growth rarely looks graceful while it’s happening.
Sometimes it looks like a child crying through a bun before class. And sometimes it looks like a parent learning how to hold loving boundaries without backing away from them.
And as always, we’re cheering your dancer on every step, spin, bun, bobby pin, and brave moment along the way.
With love from the dance floor,
Team Reach ❤️
