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Mom Bans Daughter From Seeing Best Friend After Parents Let Her Walk Home With Broken Arm

by Marry Anna
November 30, 2025
in Social Issues

Parenting involves tough decisions, and sometimes those decisions are made out of a desire to protect our kids, even when it means upsetting them.

For one mother, the breaking point came when her daughter was injured at a friend’s house and the friend’s parents didn’t bother to call or take action.

With her daughter’s safety in mind, the mother decided to ban her from visiting her best friend’s house again, feeling that the friend’s parents were negligent in their duty.

But is she being too harsh, or is her concern for her daughter’s well-being completely justified?

Mom Bans Daughter From Seeing Best Friend After Parents Let Her Walk Home With Broken Arm
Not the actual photo

'AITA for banning my daughter from going to her best friend's house?'

My daughter and her best friend, Will, have been friends since they were 5, and I let her sleep over at his house sometimes.

They're 13. Her best friend is a really sweet boy, and I love their dynamic.

I think both of them are adorable, but I don't think I can continue letting her go to his house.

This is so insane, but my daughter fell and broke her arm while at their house.

Accidents happen, so I would have been understanding if his mom called me. But she didn't.

I had no idea about it until my daughter came home the next day.

She didn't have a phone because hers was broken, and I didn't get around to buying her a new one yet because we've had a lot of expenses.

So I trusted her parents would call me if there was an issue.

But no, she spent the night at their house and then WALKED HOME with her best friend.

So his parents didn't even WALK HER HOME WHILE HER ARM WAS BROKEN.

The most insane part of this is that her mom is a nurse, so there isn't any excuse.

I told her that I find it really messed up that she didn't tell me, and it turned into a whole argument.

She said my daughter seemed fine, and she was playing afterwards, and she was too exhausted to take her to the hospital.

She said she knew I would make a big deal out of nothing, so she thought it could wait.

I insulted her, if I'm honest. I said she was a terrible parent and treated my daughter terribly.

She let her walk home alone (well, with a child, but a parent should have been with her), and she should have called me the second my daughter was hurt.

She insulted me back, and it was a whole mess.

I told my daughter and my son that they can't go over to that house anymore because that kid's parents are clearly insane.

My daughter is especially sad about this because that is her best friend, but I do think it is for the best.

I do not feel comfortable leaving them alone together. I feel like those parents are neglectful.

The OP’s reaction is understandable. Their 13‑year‑old daughter suffered a broken arm at a friend’s house, and the friend’s parent neither informed the OP nor supervised the child being sent home injured.

The OP’s decision to forbid further visits to that house reflects a serious breach of trust. Research shows that lower levels of caregiver supervision are strongly linked to increased injury risk in children.

For example, a large cohort study found that infants whose parents left them alone or didn’t keep a consistent eye on them had significantly higher risk of fractures and other injuries.

Communication between caregivers matters too. One article found that how parents talk about safety before and after injuries plays a role in shaping future risk and trust.

In the OP’s case, the parent of the friend broke both the communication and supervision norms: not only did they fail to inform the daughter’s parent of the injury, but they also allowed the child to walk home with a broken arm.

That signals a lapse in basic caregiver responsibility. However, while the OP has every right to protect their child, experts caution about using completely exclusionary measures without explanation or dialogue.

It might be helpful to initiate an honest conversation, express that the daughter’s safety is the priority, explain exactly what went wrong (lack of reporting and supervision), and ask for assurance of better handling moving forward.

After all, your daughter’s friendship is valuable, and the friend’s parents may not fully appreciate how serious the injury and non‑communication felt to you.

The OP should calmly reach out to the friend’s parents, describe how their daughter’s injury and the lack of communication impacted the family’s trust, and ask whether they are willing to put in place explicit safety and reporting measures before allowing further sleep‑overs.

Meanwhile, the daughter can continue to spend time with her friend in more supervised or shorter contexts (like daytime visits at your house).

This approach keeps your child’s immediate safety priority while allowing the possibility of rebuilding trust rather than severing the friendship entirely.

In the daughter’s experience, she was hurt at someone else’s house, and her parent was not informed or involved in what happened.

By restricting further unsupervised overnight visits, the parent is reinforcing that trust and safety are non‑negotiable, even as they acknowledge the value of their daughter’s friendship.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

These commenters emphasize that the other mother acted irresponsibly by not contacting the OP immediately after the injury, especially given the severity of the situation.

SoIFeltDizzy − NTA. Can he come round to yours?

Boring-Dragonfly9153 − NTA. It's one thing if she was injured, and it appeared your daughter was fine afterward.

But the mom still should have contacted you immediately, even if it was minor in her eyes, to give you the choice of coming to get her.

You are her parent; she should have spoken to you about it herself. It doesn't matter if she is tired.

She should have picked up the phone and let you decide if she needed to go to the emergency room.

However, most emergency rooms nowadays only put a brace on the arm until an appointment with an orthopedic can be made.

Her excuse that she is tired is not valid in my eyes.

She wouldn't be able to take her to the emergency room anyway because, unless life-threatening, a parent needs to be on-site to make a medical decision.

You would have to take your daughter, not her. A nurse would know this.

I would limit playtime at this boy's house. If they want to play, they can do so at your place.

Last_Nerve12 − NTA. Wow, I'm a nurse, and I'm disgusted. Honestly, I'd report her to the local board of nursing.

I can't even wrap my head around how messed up this is. Don't ever let your child over there again. They're negligent and a danger to your daughter.

These users acknowledge that nurses sometimes downplay injuries or shrug off symptoms, but they argue that the key issue was the lack of communication.

Southern_Committee35 − I feel like nurses are the last people to bring their own kids to the doctor. They seem to shrug a lot off in my experience.

100% you should have been called right away to choose if you wanted to seek medical care for your kiddo, though.

She had no right to make that choice for you. I'd be livid!

sheramom4 − INFO: Was the arm obviously broken? Or was she injured? It seemed small, and didn't complain of pain, and now you know it is broken?

There is a difference. Plus, broken bones, unless they are sticking out of the skin or there are other symptoms, are NOT ER-worthy injuries.

Most of the time, you don't even know for a couple of days.

I am going to go with the second scenario because your kid completed the sleepover AND walked home.

BenedictineBaby − NTA if they are pissed at you now, they are going to be very pissed when they get the medical bills. They are liable.

latents − I understand how your daughter feels, but your first priority has to be her safety. Perhaps Will can come over to your house more often for now.

Later, when you are able to get another phone and she is of an age where you feel she can mostly supervise herself, she can go to his house again....

These users share the belief that the other mother’s decision to delay medical attention was misguided.

philautos − INFO: What has your daughter said, and what have you asked her? When her arm was broken, did she ask her best friend's parents to call you?

Does Will have a phone, and did she ask him to call you? Did Will's parents forbid him to call you?

ToastetteEgg − NTA. I wonder if the mom is a drinker or some other user, and that’s why her judgment sucked. I wouldn’t let her over there either.

[Reddit User] − NTA, that’s insane that she didn’t notify.

When I was younger, my friend broke her nose on the trampoline at our house, and we called immediately and met them there.

She was fine, and we hung out the next day, but they were notified. See if he can come over to your house instead, maybe be civil with the parents.

You don’t have to talk to her, but just keep it good for the kids

ny_dc_tx_ − There is no way in all of creation I would trust those people with my child—she was tired, so my kid couldn’t go to the hospital?! For real?!

And does she know they have these things called ambulances that will come to your house and take you to the hospital?!

And she was too tired to text?! There is nothing about this that I understand. He would be welcome at my house, but she wouldn’t go back over there.

These commenters offer a slightly more lenient perspective, suggesting that it’s possible the other parent simply took a different approach to assessing injuries.

Difficult_Reading858 − INFO: In a comment, you say the arm was “obviously and severely” broken. What does this mean to you?

A broken arm is going to look different a day after being broken; depending on the nature of the injury, it could have looked entirely normal.

Did the mom actually see the arm in the morning before your daughter left with her friend?

From what I’ve gathered from the comments, your daughter is prone to accidents and downplays incidents to avoid the doctor.

Even without that history, if a thirteen-year-old takes a fall but appears perfectly fine afterwards, I wouldn’t personally be making a call to the parents unless it was a massive...

The way the other mom framed the situation (why she didn’t take your daughter to the hospital) is interesting; she “knew you would make a big deal” out of the...

Is this something that has come up before?

FunnyAussie − Honestly? I think this is a difference in how different people manage injuries.

I’m an orthopaedic surgeon. It can be hard to tell if a bone is broken or not.

My attitude has been to put the kids to bed and then work out if there’s an issue the next day.

If it’s still sore, then it warrants an X-ray; if it’s not, then great, carry on.

It’s what I’ve done with my kids and what I advise friends when they call asking if they should go to the ER.

(Two of my kids have waited 24 hours to be diagnosed with broken bones; the two fractures with visible deformity got to the ER immediately).

Many of the nurses I work with do this, too. Quick check, is it visibly deformed, or is the blood supply compromised? No? Carry on and we’ll have a look...

ERs are full of people who don’t have major injuries and just need an ice pack and 12 hours to see if it gets better on its own.

Most of the time, it is nothing. Sometimes there’s an actual injury needing treatment. The 12 hours make no difference.

The walking home makes no difference. So it’s ok to wait.

That’s not to say that this is the best approach or the approach you MUST take. I fully understand why you might have a different approach.

But I just wanted to chime in and say that I think the other mum's approach was reasonable, especially with a child and family she knows well.

Nothing unsafe happened. She was deserving of being insulted.

She’s not a ‘terrible’ parent - she’s just one who is more comfortable with assessing and managing medical issues.

I would suggest you apologise, say you were stressed by the injury, and set a boundary that you acknowledge her approach, but your approach is different, and next time you...

Make up for the sake of your daughter's friendship.

These commenters feel that the OP might have overreacted by banning the other child from future playdates without fully understanding the situation.

peoplesuck2024 − They WALKED home? They're 13? I feel like, at 13, if she really wanted to go home, she would have just walked home.

I think maybe you overreacted. She's not 5. Some of the blame needs to be put on her.

Before you ban her from her friend's, maybe talk to her and let her know how she should have handled the situation.

I broke my arm when I was ten. It didn't really hurt until the next day until after I slept on it and used it as if it wasn't broken.

Maybe, when it happened, it didn't hurt; no one knew it was broken, and now that it's been broken for 24 hours, it's bad enough to need surgery.

ustaadboss − NTA, how do you not call and tell a parent about something so major happening while their child is under your care? You made the right call.

The OP’s protective instincts as a parent are completely understandable, especially after such a traumatic event involving their child. But is it fair to ban their daughter from her best friend’s house because of a situation that may have been an honest mistake?

Should the parents have acted differently, or is this an overreaction in an emotional moment? How would you handle a similar situation, would you trust the other parents, or would you take a firm stance like the OP did? Share your thoughts below!

Marry Anna

Marry Anna

Hello, lovely readers! I’m Marry Anna, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. As a woman over 30, I bring my curiosity and a background in Creative Writing to every piece I create. My mission is to spark joy and thought through stories, whether I’m covering quirky food trends, diving into self-care routines, or unpacking the beauty of human connections. From articles on sustainable living to heartfelt takes on modern relationships, I love adding a warm, relatable voice to my work. Outside of writing, I’m probably hunting for vintage treasures, enjoying a glass of red wine, or hiking with my dog under the open sky.

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