His 9-Year-Old Dreams Of Becoming A Pro Footballer, But The Family Thinks It’s Time For A “Reality Check”

There’s something kind of pure about the way kids talk about their future. No hesitation, no backup plans, just “this is what I’m going to be.” For one dad, that’s exactly what he’s trying to protect.

His nine-year-old son is obsessed with football. Not casually into it, not just kicking a ball around after school, but genuinely committed.

He trains, plays at a good level for his age, and talks about becoming a professional like it’s already mapped out.

The dad knows the odds. He’s not delusional about how rare that outcome is. But he also doesn’t see the point in shutting it down right now.

The problem is, the rest of the family does. And they’re not being subtle about it either. Here’s where things got messy.

His 9-Year-Old Dreams of Becoming a Pro Footballer, but the Family Thinks It’s Time for a “Reality Check”
Not the actual photo

Here’s how it all unfolded:

'AITAH for supporting my 9-year-old son’s dream of becoming a professional football player even though it’s unrealistic?'

My son is 9 years old and, like a lot of kids his age, he dreams of becoming a professional football player.

I’m fully aware that the chances of that actually happening are extremely small.

Millions of kids have that same dream, and only a tiny percentage ever make it.

That said, he’s not just casually interested. He already plays at a relatively high level for his age and is very passionate about it.

It’s something he genuinely works hard at and enjoys. I still don’t really see the harm in letting him dream. He’s 9.

In a few years, maybe by the time he’s 15 or 16, his interests and priorities will probably change anyway.

For now, I just want him to enjoy being a kid and feel supported in what excites him.

If tomorrow he wanted to become a professional singer or something else, I’d support that too.

The problem is my family strongly disagrees. They’re already telling him he needs to think about a “real” job and more realistic future plans.

It bothers me because I feel like they’re shutting down his imagination way too early.

I’ve told them to stop saying that to him and to just let him be a kid, but they think I’m being naïve and setting him up for disappointment.

So now there’s tension because I’m pushing back against them and defending my approach.

EDIT: I wanted to add that he is also at the top of his class at school.

Education is more important than his hobby.. EDIT: I'm sorry, i'm European.

And i'm talking about SOCCER..... AITAH for going against my family and continuing to support my son’s dream?

A kid who actually cares

The boy isn’t just saying “I want to be a footballer” the way kids say they want to be astronauts one week and magicians the next.

He’s putting in the work. Practices seriously, plays competitively, talks about improving.

At the same time, he’s doing fine in school. Actually more than fine, he’s at the top of his class. So it’s not like football is replacing everything else. It’s just the thing he loves most right now.

That’s what makes the dad hesitate to interfere. Because what exactly is the problem here? The kid is motivated, disciplined, happy. Those are usually things parents try to encourage, not shut down.

The “real world” talk, way too early

The issue started when other family members stepped in and basically decided it was time for a reality check.

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They’ve been telling the kid he needs to think about a “real job.” That becoming a professional footballer isn’t realistic. That he should start planning something more stable.

To a nine-year-old.

The dad didn’t take that well. He told them to stop, pretty clearly. His point was simple, the kid has years before any of that matters.

Why take away something he enjoys now just to prepare him for a disappointment that hasn’t even happened yet?

But the family sees it differently. In their minds, they’re helping. Better to be realistic early than crushed later. They think the dad is being too soft, maybe even setting his son up for a harder fall.

And now it’s not just about the kid anymore. It’s turned into a full-on disagreement about parenting.

What actually helps kids grow

There’s a reason this situation feels so split. Because both sides are kind of reacting to something real, just from different angles.

According to Verywell Mind, letting kids chase big, even unrealistic dreams isn’t harmful in itself. In fact, it can be really important.

When kids care deeply about something, they build discipline, confidence, and a sense of identity through it.

The key thing experts point out is that the value isn’t in whether the dream comes true. It’s in what the kid learns while chasing it.

Sticking to practice, dealing with wins and losses, pushing through frustration, all of that carries over into whatever they end up doing later.

On the flip side, shutting a kid down too early can backfire. It can make them second-guess themselves, or worse, stop trying altogether because they think there’s no point.

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That doesn’t mean you ignore reality forever. It just means timing matters. A lot.

And in this case, the dad isn’t saying “you’ll definitely be a pro.” He’s just saying, “go for it, we’ll figure the rest out later.”

What this is really about

The weird part is, this isn’t actually about football.

It’s about how adults handle uncertainty. Some people want to prepare kids early, make sure they don’t aim too high and get hurt.

Others think childhood is the one time you’re allowed to aim too high without consequences.

Neither side is trying to be cruel. But telling a nine-year-old to think about job security just feels… off.

At that age, “future planning” should probably look more like “what do you enjoy doing?” not “what’s your backup career.”

The bigger question is whether protecting a kid from possible disappointment is worth taking away something that currently makes them excited and driven.

Reddit Had Plenty to Say About This One:

Most people were firmly on the dad’s side. The general vibe was, he’s nine, let him live a little.

peakpenguins − NTA, he's a kid. Let him be a kid. 9 year olds shouldn't have to worry about whether their life goals are achievable or not.

Makimamoochie − He's 9. He doesn't need to think about making TPS reports or B2B sales, like what does your family think jobs are these days?

Enough_Passage7926 − They’re already telling him he needs to think about a “real” job and more realistic future plans.

TO A NINE YEAR OLD? !? Jesus F__king Christ they need to get a grip and stop projecting their loser mentality onto him.

Might as well send him to the mines right now. NTA

A lot of commenters shared their own childhood dreams that didn’t pan out, but said the experience still mattered.StillStanding613 − At his age, I wanted to be a jockey. I figured out when I was already 5'5" at the age of 11 that

it was never going to happen. He'll figure it out on his own. Let him dream for now.

Bright-Plate-9872 − Wait, he's nine and isn't digging ditches yet? Already a failure in life

FearlessKnitter12 − Let him dream. As he ages, introduce the idea that even a pro ball player likely has a short career,

and may want a back-up plan (such as a business degree, so they know what to do with money, at the very least).

Some people suggested a middle ground, support the dream, but slowly introduce reality later, like talking about backup plans when he’s older.Even_Budget2078 − NTA When I was 10, I wanted to be a WWF female wrestler (was obsessed with Hulk Hogan lol) and

my godfather took me to an outdoor park and "trained" me for 2 years.

He was a public school gym teacher, so it was real training. He and my parents took it completely seriously as long as I wanted to do it.

I abandoned my dreams at the tender age of 12 (sad face) and no one made a big deal about it,

just asked what I wanted to do when I grew up. I wanted to be a UN interpreter. ..and the cycle repeated. I'm a lawyer and law professor.

I do speak four languages, but never returned to my childhood love of wrestling,

except the amazing memories with my godfather (now passed). Edited to add judgment

LFEBambi − NTA - support his dreams and passions, but also make sure he’s not failing at the other things that he may need to pivot into if this doesn’t...

Kwaziiii − NTA, but your family is. Seriously, tell them to f__k off or they're not seeing him anymore.

He's 9, let the boy dream while he still can, and who knows, maybe something actually comes out of it.

Nobody made it as a professional footballer by accident.

CanadianDuckball − NTA. He's NINE. Let him dream.

There’s no guarantee this kid will become a professional footballer. Statistically, he probably won’t.

But right now, that’s not really the point.

He’s excited about something. He’s working at it. He’s doing well in school. Nothing is falling apart.

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So maybe the real question isn’t whether the dream is realistic.

Maybe it’s whether every dream needs to be.

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