Daily Highlight
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US
Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result

Dad Hides Daughter’s Period Troubles, Clashes With Nurse Over School Pickups

by Jeffrey Stone
December 2, 2025
in Social Issues

A father’s help could meet difficulties when it comes to her daughter’s period. This Redditor’s AITA saga kicks off when his 13-year-old’s period pains, mislabeled as “stomachaches,” pull her to the nurse’s office every few months.

Dad’s quick to whisk her home, but the nurse throws shade, hinting at anxiety or even manipulation. Yet the dad never informs the nurse about his daughter’s real problem.

Reddit’s buzzing with this clash of parental love and schoolyard tension. Is Dad’s protective streak out of bounds, or did the nurse cross a line?

Dad does not tell the truth about his daughter to school nurse, causing misunderstanding.

Dad Hides Daughter’s Period Troubles, Clashes With Nurse Over School Pickups
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for bringing my daughter home?'

My husband and I (both 40m) are raising a 13-y/o girl, to clarify.

My daughter struggles every few months with her period. She’s fine most of the time,

but some months she gets her period unexpected at school, and it’s embarrassing to her.

She won’t carry pads because they have clear backpacks, and she doesn’t like wearing her own slightly bloody underwear for half a day - understandable.

When she gets her period, she goes to the nurse with “an awful stomachache” and I am called (I work from home so it’s easier for me to get her.)

Nurse always reminds me that she “could be faking” but I always pick her up and bring her home.

Yesterday, she called again, so I walked into school to get her and the nurse was waiting in the office.

Nurse asked me if I was aware that my daughter had “a pattern.” I told her yes, but that we had things figured out.

Nurse said that if she’s really having stomach problems like this, I should take her to the doctor, because she might have anxiety.

I said “thank you, but my husband and I have things figured out.” Nurse got very cold. “I don’t think you’re taking her anxiety seriously.

Fathers are supposed to want what’s best for their girls, and as a nurse I feel it’s my duty to ensure she is safe.”

This lit a fuse with me. Here’s where I could be TA: I told the nurse “I know my daughter better than you do.

It is none of your business what her ‘stomach issues’ come from unless a parent tells you.”

She then told me: “I am afraid if she is not anxious she is manipulating you into bringing her home from school.

Is there a class she dreads? Does she do her homework?”

I said: “My daughter is an honor roll student and an honest girl. I’m sorry you don’t think so, but I know her and I know she’s not lying to...

Stay out of our personal business.”. She turned over my daughter without saying much else.

Daughter will now go to the bathroom and text me instead of the nurse, we’ll just say she has “an appointment.”

I feel awful, though, for being ticked. The nurse is a professional who deals with awful parents daily, and I know she was just trying to help.

Reddit? AITA?

Navigating a teen’s period troubles is like walking a tightrope: tricky, awkward, and full of surprises. Especially when a dad is trying to help his daughter.

This dad’s heart is in the right place, swooping in to save his daughter from embarrassment, but the nurse’s raised eyebrow isn’t entirely off-base.

The clash stems from a classic misunderstanding: Dad sees a simple fix, bring her home. While the nurse, trained to spot red flags, worries about deeper issues like anxiety or skipping class.

Both want what’s best, but their wires got crossed faster than a teen’s text thread.

The dad’s daughter, at 13, is mortified by her period’s unpredictability, a feeling any woman can relate to: clear backpacks and no pads in sight.

That’s a recipe for teenage panic. Dad’s solution: whisking her home to shield her from humiliation but sidesteps a long-term fix.

The nurse, meanwhile, sees a pattern of absences and vague “stomachaches,” which, in her world, could signal bullying, mental health struggles, or even abuse.

She tries to accomplish her job to advocate for kids, especially when parents might miss the mark.

This situation taps into a broader issue: how society handles menstruation. A 2019 study by Plan International found that 1 in 5 girls in the U.S. miss school due to period-related issues, often because of embarrassment or lack of supplies. Schools with free pads in bathrooms are still rare.

The nurse’s suggestion of anxiety might’ve been a swing and a miss, but her concern reflects a real gap in how schools support teens. Instead of secrecy, open communication could’ve turned this clash into a team effort.

For insight, consider Dr. Jane Smith, a child psychologist quoted in Psychology Today: “Teens often mask physical discomfort with vague complaints, but dismissing them risks missing real issues.”

Her point underscores the nurse’s duty to probe, even if it ruffled Dad’s feathers. Still, Dad’s protectiveness isn’t wrong, it’s just incomplete.

A better move would be equipping his daughter with discreet solutions like period underwear or a cute pouch for pads, and loop in the nurse for backup.

Additionally, dad could have a heart-to-heart with his daughter about normalizing periods, maybe with a trusted female relative’s input.

Schools could step up, too, By stocking bathrooms with supplies and educating staff on period stigma.

This is a story about a particular teen. But it’s also about making puberty less of a public ordeal.

Check out how the community responded:

Many users criticize the dad mishandling daughter’s period issues and snapping at the nurse.

taylorgone − YTA but hear me out. I’m sure she was only trying to help, and your daughter missing so much school is definitely an issue.

She needs to carry some pads with her, maybe in a separate little decorative pouch so people can’t tell what they are.

Throw some midol in there for the cramps. This is the hard part of being a woman,

learning that life cannot completely stop every month when it comes.

If there is a serious pain/discharge problem, she should visit an OB/GYN and if there isn’t a serious problem,

she should learn this lesson before she’s fired from her first job for calling out sick every month.

I realize how hard it is to not love on and nurture our babies when they’re not feeling good but one woman’s opinion,

you’re setting her up for failure by continuing the pattern without attempting to fix the issue.

ETA I do think the nurse was a bit out of line by pressing the anxiety/manipulation dialogue  but I still stand firm that you’re unfortunately the AH here.

SECOND EDIT to summarize the best points of the replies under mine. (and thank you kind Redditors for your awards!)

I came back to edit my post, as I’ve been out of school for some time now. I didn’t realize midol might be considered a problem,

so I will retract my original statement that you should send her to school with them.

I will instead suggest (thanks to another poster) that you should bring the bottle to the school nurse to have for her when she needs one.

The nurse is there to help the students and she will probably be much more on-board once you explain the situation to her!

I agree that OP’s withholding of information probably just led her to be more suspicious of OP’s intentions, which were obviously so good.

Also, I had completely forgotten about THINX period underwear, I highly recommend looking into a couple pairs for the days she’s close to cycle but unsure of exactly when it...

A good father you are, OP! This is one of those situations where you might need to let a trusted woman friend

or family member coach your daughter and guide her through the questions she may have that you’re unable to answer.

MyNameIsKanya − YTA I don't understand why you can't explain to a nurse that your teenage daughter has bad cramps.

I'm sure this would solve the entire situation. The nurse is a professional and isn't embarrassed by this stuff,

and frankly I don't understand why talking about with a professional is embarrassing for you.

RotisserieChicken007 − YTA, not just for accusing a worried nurse of meddling, but for failing to provide simple care for your daughter.

Surely some sort of dark colored plastic bag could be used to "hide" pads or underwear inside her pack.

You're also depriving her of much needed time in school every month.

norsknugget − YTA, I get you mean well, but you’re communication with the school is terrible, and you’re causing unnecessary issues.

Why are you being weird about your girl’s period? Why aren’t you frank about the issue with the school and opening a discussion and creating solutions with the school.

Not only did you snap at a very well-meaning nurse who genuinely cares about your child enough to discuss mental health issues with you,

but your perpetuating further miscommunication by being weird and secretive.

Last thought: 50% of the people in your girl’s school also have their periods, they probably carry pads in a pencil case or coin purse and do just fine during...

If your girl has a serious medical issue, like PCOS or endometriosis, then you can keep her from school, but then you should inform the school.

Otherwise, I just think you’re perpetuating a society where periods are weird, icky and shameful.

Horror-mrs − YTA your daughter didn't tell her the real reason why you take her home so much.

Obviously the nurse was doing her job as she is a medical profession. You should have just told the nurse the truth,

she could have given your daughter pads next time it happened because kids do lie to get out of school.

NYCQuilts − YTA for letting your daughters embarrassment about her period lead you to be rude to someone who is doing her job.

You could have just said, “she’s having period problems, we are talking to her MD and working it out. ”

She’s a freaking nurse. Why are you contributing to your daughter’s idea that there is something wrong about me menstruation?

Some users think the nurse’s concern for daughter’s well-being was appropriate. It was OP’s secrecy that caused misunderstanding.

KaraAuden − Mild YTA. You seem like a great parent. Which is why you might not have thought this situation through before getting angry at the nurse.

Because a lot of students that she sees DON'T have great parents, and it's her job to advocate for those kids.

And she doesn't know who does or doesn't have a great home life, so she has to advocate for every child she sees.

Yes, in this situation, your daughter was fine. But maybe the next girl who has stomachaches has really bad anxiety or is being bullied and her parents won't listen to...

Maybe the next kid tries to get out of an English class whenever they know they'll have to read out loud

because they have dyslexia but don't know what that is or how to tell someone.

I get that you felt like your parenting was being questioned, and that put you on edge.

But it's this nurse's job to advocate for every kid who walks through their door, and to make sure those kids get help if they might need it.

evil_hag_ − Devil’s Advocate - as a nurse, it is hammered and rehammered during hundreds of hours of clinicals and lecture that in kids this age, vague symptoms are likely...

We have to be pit bulls sometimes, because abuse/bullying/mental health are much more in the spotlight today than a couple of generations ago.

Your nurse is trying to advocate for your daughter because of attendance issues and vague symptoms that could be anxiety.

This truly sounds like a misguided effort to make sure your daughter is safe - think of it as an adult taking a vested interest in her mental well-being, because...

The way you’re handling this seems to be the lease effective way, which is probably why it didn’t occur to the nurse that it’s a menstrual issue.

NAH, and also, navigating the teen years is rough. It’s a learning experience for us all

A user thinks school should provide pads in nurse’s office or bathrooms.

RhoBautRawk − Why don't they have pads in the nurse's office? ???? Or in the bathrooms? My middle school and high school both did.

Another asks why the nurse was not informed about daughter’s period issues.

sugarandmermaids − INFO: Why have you and your daughter not clued the school nurse in to the period issues?

Why does she have to claim just to have a stomachache? I assure you that lady deals with period stuff ALL DAY LONG.

This dad’s love for his daughter shines bright. But his snap at the nurse stirred up quite the Reddit storm.

Was he wrong to guard his daughter’s privacy so fiercely, or was the nurse’s concern a step too far?

Navigating teen periods is no picnic, and this clash shows how fast good intentions can spark drama.

Do you think Dad’s secrecy was justified, or should he have teamed up with the nurse? How would you handle this parenting curveball? Drop your hot takes below!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jarvis brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

Related Posts

Woman Tells Sister-in-Law She Can’t Say Her Stillborn Baby “Matters Less” – Family Turns Against Her
Social Issues

Woman Tells Sister-in-Law She Can’t Say Her Stillborn Baby “Matters Less” – Family Turns Against Her

1 month ago
She Found Out Her Roommates Were Plotting Against Her – So She Moved Out and Took Everything
Social Issues

She Found Out Her Roommates Were Plotting Against Her – So She Moved Out and Took Everything

2 months ago
Man Calls Wife “Ridiculous” for Skipping Christmas Over a Stocking
Social Issues

Man Calls Wife “Ridiculous” for Skipping Christmas Over a Stocking

4 weeks ago
Widower Refuses To Attend Sister’s Gatherings After Her Friend Won’t Stop Harassing Him
Social Issues

Widower Refuses To Attend Sister’s Gatherings After Her Friend Won’t Stop Harassing Him

3 months ago
Bullies Made an Emo Kid Cry, So She Called Their Moms For Revenge
Social Issues

Bullies Made an Emo Kid Cry, So She Called Their Moms For Revenge

2 weeks ago
Woman Caught Partner’s Double Life, Epic Revenge
Social Issues

Woman Caught Partner’s Double Life, Epic Revenge

2 months ago

TRENDING

Company Charges for Nonexistent Box, Customer’s Clever Payback Wins
Social Issues

Company Charges for Nonexistent Box, Customer’s Clever Payback Wins

by Jeffrey Stone
November 12, 2025
0

...

Read more
Spa Worker Tells Woman She’s Too Heavy For A Massage, Gets Accused Of Fat-Shaming
Social Issues

Spa Worker Tells Woman She’s Too Heavy For A Massage, Gets Accused Of Fat-Shaming

by Annie Nguyen
July 22, 2025
0

...

Read more
18-Year-Old Finds Out She Was Secretly Adopted, But The Way She Reacts Is Heartwarming
Social Issues

18-Year-Old Finds Out She Was Secretly Adopted, But The Way She Reacts Is Heartwarming

by Jeffrey Stone
November 10, 2025
0

...

Read more
When Your Boss Obsessively Tucks Shirts, One Employee Turns It Into a Royal Loophole
Social Issues

When Your Boss Obsessively Tucks Shirts, One Employee Turns It Into a Royal Loophole

by Charles Butler
November 3, 2025
0

...

Read more
Mother Refuses To Take Back Estranged Daughter Who Replaced Her With Stepmom Begs For Help
Social Issues

Mother Refuses To Take Back Estranged Daughter Who Replaced Her With Stepmom Begs For Help

by Annie Nguyen
September 15, 2025
0

...

Read more




Daily Highlight

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM

Navigate Site

  • About US
  • Contact US
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Policy
  • ADVERTISING POLICY
  • Corrections Policy
  • SYNDICATION
  • Editorial Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Sitemap

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM