My Husband’s Secret Hobby Changed Everything—But Not How I Expected
“My husband became quiet ever since he started his new ‘hobby.’
Every time I asked him about it, he’d only say it was ‘liberating.’
I started noticing red stains on his underwear whenever he returned from the workshop. One day, I followed him. I entered and froze when I saw him being…”
…tender.
He was hunched over a chair, sewing a deep red velvet fabric with tiny, meticulous stitches. A half-finished dress hung from a mannequin. There were pins stuck in a tomato-shaped cushion, measuring tapes dangling off hooks, a vintage Singer machine humming softly as he fed fabric through it.
He didn’t hear me at first. He was too focused. The red stains?
They weren’t blood. They were dye, fabric paint, and sometimes even chalk. The man had been making clothes—specifically, dresses.
And not just any dresses. Gowns. Dramatic, show-stopping gowns that belonged on runways or in theater productions.
He looked up, startled. “Cressida?” he whispered, eyes wide. “What are you doing here?”
I should have said something kind.
Or at least something neutral. But my mouth blurted the first thing it found. “Are you… crossdressing?”
He blinked.
“No. I mean… sometimes I try them on to check the fit. But I’m not doing this to wear them.
I’m designing them.”
There was a long silence. He shifted uncomfortably, rubbing the back of his neck like a schoolboy caught skipping class. “This isn’t some midlife crisis,” he said.
“I’ve always wanted to do this. Ever since I was a teenager. But it never felt… allowed.”
I stared at the room.
The bolts of fabric, the sketches taped to the wall, the dress forms. He hadn’t just picked up a random hobby—he was building a world. A hidden one.
“But why didn’t you just tell me?” I asked quietly. He sighed. “Because I didn’t know if I could face you being disappointed in me.”
That hit harder than I expected.
Because he wasn’t wrong. The part of me that wanted my husband to remain the same sturdy, predictable man I married was disappointed. But that part was also small and scared.
The other part of me—the part that loved him—was just confused. Still, I left the workshop that day without saying much else. I needed time.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇
