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Dad Hides Daughter’s Sketchbook After Mom Reads It Without Permission

by Carolyn Mullet
March 15, 2026
in Social Issues

One twelve-year-old’s sketchbook suddenly became the center of a family conflict.

Children often turn to journals, drawings, or private creative spaces when emotions run high. For many kids, those pages become the safest place to sort out confusing feelings.

One Reddit dad recently shared a story about how that safe space nearly disappeared.

His daughter Claire splits her time between his home and her mom’s house in a shared custody arrangement. Life seemed relatively stable until a blowup between Claire and her stepsiblings changed everything.

After the younger kids went through Claire’s room and broke some of her belongings, the situation escalated. Instead of addressing the invasion of privacy, Claire’s mother decided to examine her daughter’s sketchbook.

The goal, she said, was to “find out what was going on in Claire’s head.”

What happened next left the dad wondering if protecting his daughter’s creative space crossed a line.

Now, read the full story:

Dad Hides Daughter’s Sketchbook After Mom Reads It Without Permission
Not the actual photo

'AITA for letting my daughter keep her sketchbook at my house after her mom looked through it without permission?'

So, to start, I have 50/50 custody of my daughter Claire (12f) with my ex-wife Jessica.

Jessica is married to Chris (40m), who has two kids; Addie (7f) and Luke (10m).

Claire spends one week at my place, one week with her mom. Sunday is the ‘swap day’.

Two weeks ago, Claire had a huge fight with her stepsiblings.

Apparently they snuck into her room when she was away and went through her stuff, breaking some of her important items in the process,

and Claire screamed at them when she found out. Jessica and Chris wrote off Addie and Luke’s behavior as “kids will be kids”

(I disagree, I think that Addie and Luke need a reality check for their behavior and that they shouldn’t get away with it).

However, they said that Claire’s reaction was “over the top” and “a sign that there’s something wrong with her”.

Jessica decided that she needed to “find out what’s in Claire’s head”

and so she confiscated Claire’s sketchbook (which Claire uses to get her feelings out) and went through it.

Apparently, what she found was “disturbing” (Claire has showed me her sketchbook before and no it isn’t) and took Claire to a psychologist for evaluation.

Spoiler alert: they didn’t find anything. My daughter is completely mentally healthy, save for (surprise surprise) stress from her step-siblings.

Anyway, I got Claire last Sunday, and she spent her first few hours with me holed up in her room (sketching I think).

At dinner, she told me what happened, and I surprised her with pancake breakfast the next morning to make her feel better.

Before I gave her back to Jessica, Claire asked me to keep her sketchbook at my house so her mom wouldn’t look through it.

I said yes, and she went over to her mom’s place without it.

Yesterday, I got a text from Jessica. She said that she was “worried that Claire forgot her sketchbook” because when she went to confiscate it,

it wasn’t where Claire usually keeps it. She then asked me to arrange a time and place for her to pick it up.

I said that the sketchbook was with me, and that I decided to keep it because I didn’t want it confiscated again

(I didn’t want to throw Claire under the bus here, in hindsight lying probably wasn’t the best idea).

She said that I was being an AH because she “has a right to her daughter’s mind”.

I said that i was worried because of how she handled it last time she went through it. She restated her previous point, and I did not respond..

It’s been about a day since that conversation, and I’m starting to question my choice. AITA?

When you read a story like this, it is hard not to think about how important trust becomes during childhood.

For many kids, a diary or sketchbook acts like a pressure valve. It gives them a quiet way to process stress without needing to explain everything out loud.

Claire clearly trusted her dad enough to ask for help protecting that space. That moment probably meant more than the sketchbook itself.

The tension here is not only about privacy. It is about how adults interpret a child’s emotions and whether they treat those emotions with curiosity or control.

Psychologists actually see situations like this fairly often.

Creative expression often plays a critical role in emotional development for children and adolescents.

Drawing, journaling, and other forms of private creative work allow young people to process complex feelings in a safe environment.

According to the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, expressive activities like writing and drawing help children regulate emotions and cope with stressful situations.

When children know their private thoughts may be inspected without permission, that outlet can disappear.

Psychologists often compare diaries or sketchbooks to emotional rehearsal spaces.

They allow children to experiment with feelings, fears, and frustrations before deciding how to communicate them.

Dr. Dan Siegel, a clinical professor of psychiatry at UCLA, has written that children need what he calls “safe internal spaces” where they can explore emotions without fear of judgment.

When adults invade that space without clear safety concerns, the result can damage trust rather than improve understanding.

In this case, the mother’s concern may have come from a place of worry.

Parents sometimes fear that creative expression might reveal hidden distress or dangerous thoughts.

However, experts generally recommend conversation before surveillance.

Child therapist Katie Hurley writes in Psychology Today that “reading a child’s diary without permission can break trust in ways that are difficult to repair.”

Hurley explains that parents should only invade a child’s private writings if they believe the child may be in immediate danger.

Examples might include threats of self harm or serious safety concerns.

In most situations, open dialogue proves more effective.

Simply asking a child how they are feeling often reveals more than searching through their belongings.

Another key factor in this story involves blended family dynamics.

Research from the Pew Research Center shows that about 16 percent of children in the United States live in blended families with step siblings or step parents.

These families often experience higher levels of stress during adjustment periods.

Children may feel that their personal space or routines suddenly disappear when new family members move in.

Claire’s initial reaction to her stepsiblings breaking her belongings fits a very common pattern.

The conflict itself may not indicate emotional instability at all.

It may simply reflect frustration about boundaries.

From a developmental perspective, children around Claire’s age begin forming a stronger sense of personal identity.

Privacy becomes an important part of that process.

Allowing a child to maintain small personal spaces such as journals, sketchbooks, or private hobbies helps support that independence.

The father’s response in this situation reflects a protective instinct toward that boundary.

Whether or not the parents agree, the central issue becomes how the child experiences the situation.

If Claire feels safe expressing herself at one home and monitored at another, that difference could shape where she chooses to open up emotionally.

Ultimately, the healthiest outcome usually involves cooperation between parents.

Children benefit most when adults prioritize communication and mutual respect over control.

Check out how the community responded:

Many Redditors immediately sided with the dad and felt the mom crossed a serious boundary. Several compared reading the sketchbook to reading a private diary.

Stlrivergirl - NTA. This is basically reading your child’s diary. That boundary should not be crossed unless something very serious is happening.

Keep being your child’s advocate.

brainthinkin - NTA. Your ex does not have a right to her daughter’s mind. The psychologist visit alone might help your case for more custody.

BackYourself1954 - NTA. Your ex is pathologizing a normal reaction to broken boundaries.

She should talk to her daughter instead of treating her like a problem.

gte105u - NTA. There is no reason the sketchbook cannot stay at your house. Journals and diaries should remain private unless safety is involved.

Others warned that the situation might point to deeper issues in the blended household.

Reddit User - NTA. Document everything. Your daughter may be getting scapegoated in that house. This behavior is concerning.

DuckyDuck67 - NTA. Your feelings are valid. Distancing yourself and protecting your daughter makes sense.

mmiggs - NTA. Claire might be better off keeping all important belongings at your home. You are doing the right thing defending her.

Some commenters focused on the importance of trust between parent and child.

ieya404 - You are showing Claire she has a safe place with you. That matters more than anything.

Jessica should learn that the best way to know what someone is thinking is to talk to them.

DoIwantToKnow6417 - NTA. Your daughter is lucky she has at least one parent supporting her.

SatisfactoryLoaf - NTA. No one has a right to someone else’s mind. Keep being the safe place she needs.

HotShotWriterDude - If anyone needs psychological help here it might be the mom. That “right to her mind” comment is alarming.

At its core, this story revolves around something simple yet powerful. Trust.

Children need to believe that at least one adult in their life respects their feelings and boundaries.

Claire’s sketchbook may look like a small object.

For her, it probably represents something much bigger.

It is a place where she can explore emotions, frustrations, and creativity without feeling judged.

When that space becomes monitored or controlled, children often stop sharing entirely.

The dad’s choice to protect that space may help preserve the trust his daughter placed in him.

Still, co parenting situations often involve difficult decisions.

Balancing privacy, safety, and parental concern rarely comes with easy answers.

What do you think? Was the father right to keep the sketchbook safe at his home, or should he have respected the mother’s request to return it? And how much privacy should children have when it comes to personal journals or creative outlets?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet is in charge of planning and content process management, business development, social media, strategic partnership relations, brand building, and PR for DailyHighlight. Before joining Dailyhighlight, she served as the Vice President of Editorial Development at Aubtu Today, and as a senior editor at various magazines and media agencies.

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