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Mother Sends Extra Clothes For Her Toddler, Discovers Preschool Gave Them To Other Kids Without Asking

by Annie Nguyen
January 28, 2026
in Social Issues

Sending a child off to preschool for the first time comes with a mix of excitement and anxiety. Parents do their best to follow every instruction, pack every requested item, and trust that what they send will be used appropriately. Most of the time, that trust goes unquestioned, until something small raises a much bigger concern.

That is exactly what happened to this parent after their daughter’s first days at school. While they were fine sharing disposable items in a pinch, they noticed something that made them pause during pickup. What seemed like a simple oversight suddenly brought up worries about cost, boundaries, and fairness.

Now the OP is wondering if speaking up would make things awkward, or if staying quiet would only make things worse. Keep reading to see why this seemingly minor issue sparked such a dilemma.

A parent sent extra supplies and clothes to preschool, only to later see her child’s shirt worn by another student

Mother Sends Extra Clothes For Her Toddler, Discovers Preschool Gave Them To Other Kids Without Asking
Not the actual photo

WIBTAH if I asked my daughter’s preschool teacher not to put the extra clothes that I sent for her on other students?

So my daughter started school last Wednesday, and the teacher asked us

to send pull-ups, wipes, and a change of clothes for her.

I sent quite a few pull-ups, and a brand new pack of wipes, and an outfit as requested.

Only the bottoms for her outfit came back, and I saw another student from her class,

wearing her shirt when I went to pick her up.

Now, I don’t mind if the teacher needs to use some of my daughter’s pull-ups for the other kids, or even some of her wipes.

I’ll send extra of those things if needed because I understand what it’s like to be the parent that can’t provide that.

However, when it comes to her clothes, I’m not OK with sharing.

For starters, if they get sent home on a kid (like the shirt did)

then there’s a chance that the school won’t get it back,

and clothes are really expensive and I can’t afford to replace them like that.

It all pretty much boils down to the fact that my daughter doesn’t really have

that many clothes to begin with,

so I can’t really afford for them to get ruined, or for them not to get sent back.

So, I’m just curious if it would make me the a__hole if I talk to her teacher the next day

that she goes to school, and tell her that I’m not comfortable with her using her clothes for other children.

There’s a quiet anxiety many parents carry but rarely articulate: the fear that the small things they carefully provide for their children won’t be protected once those children are out of sight. When resources are limited, that fear deepens, because clothes aren’t just clothes; they’re security, planning, and peace of mind.

In this situation, the OP wasn’t reacting to a missing shirt alone. Emotionally, she was responding to a breach of trust during a vulnerable transition. Her child had just started preschool, and she was learning to rely on others to care for what mattered most to her.

She had already shown compassion by being open to sharing consumables like pull-ups and wipes, understanding that not all families can provide consistently.

Clothing, however, carried a different emotional weight. With limited outfits available, the idea that her child’s clothes could be given away, damaged, or not returned created anxiety, not resentment, but fear of loss and instability.

What’s often overlooked here is how easily generosity can blur into obligation, especially for parents. Psychologically, caregivers, particularly mothers, are often conditioned to accommodate, avoid friction, and prioritize group harmony.

The OP’s hesitation wasn’t about being unwilling to help; it was about not wanting to appear difficult or unkind. Yet boundaries aren’t a rejection of empathy. They are what allow empathy to exist without quietly eroding one person’s sense of safety to support another’s needs.

Psychology Today emphasizes that healthy boundaries are essential in caregiving environments, especially when responsibility and authority are unevenly distributed.

Their overview on boundaries explains that when personal limits aren’t acknowledged or respected, people often experience anxiety, resentment, and a loss of trust, even when no harm was intended. Boundaries, the article notes, are not acts of selfishness; they are tools that clarify expectations and preserve respectful relationships.

Viewed through that lens, the OP’s discomfort becomes not only understandable but necessary. The preschool’s decision, intentional or not, to put her child’s clothing on another student crossed a personal boundary tied to her child’s well-being.

Even if the teacher was acting out of convenience or urgency, the absence of consent or communication matters. Addressing it calmly isn’t an accusation; it’s an effort to restore trust and clarity.

Ultimately, advocating for a child doesn’t require abandoning compassion for others. It requires recognizing that support systems work best when responsibility is shared transparently, not quietly transferred.

Speaking up about clothing use isn’t about refusing to help; it’s about ensuring that kindness doesn’t come at the cost of security for families who are already doing their best.

See what others had to share with OP:

These commenters stressed that sharing clothes is a major daycare no-no

gc_Bill5049 − That is so inappropriate, if the child had no clothes

and the school has no back up clothes they pphone the parent.

They definitely shouldn't take another child's clothes.

What would happen if they gave her clothes away and she had an accident and needed them? ?

Vegetable_Stuff1850 − NTA I worked in childcare for 10 years

and would never have put clothes from one child on a non-related (direct sibling in the same household) child.

Speak to the room leader, and speak to someone above.

Ask them to contact the family of the child who was wearing your daughters clothes to be returned.

Swirlyflurry − NTA When I worked daycare this was a huge no-no.

If it comes in with a kid, it’s only used on that kid.

Every class had a bin of spare clothes and some extra diapers

(all of it usually things that a kid grew out of and the parents let us keep).

If we needed clothing or diapers and didn’t have any or didn’t have something in the right size for the kid,

we would call around to other classrooms to see if they had some we could borrow.

But private items brought in by the parent for their kid are for that kid only.

It was very much drilled into us that if you use another kid’s diapers or clothing or

(god for freakin’ bid) breastmilk for the wrong child,

you’re basically stealing from that parent. Not okay.

This group urged escalating the issue to management or administration

Vequihellin − NTA. It's wildly inappropriate for the school to be giving away your property.

If it were me, I'd be raising it with the teacher and the head of the facility.

As you say, sharing the pull ups and wipes is one thing but clothes is totally another.

I'm petty, too, so I might be the kind of person who sends spare clothes festooned with my child's name

and a massive tag inside saying 'Property of $Child's name, if found please return to/please call XXZ'.

Koquet − NTA. The teacher had no right to do that,

whatever item you sent your kid with is only exclusively should be for your kid alone.

That teacher needs to be talked to and if possible, go over her head

and inform a higher authority about that incident,

to ensure it never happens again and for proper documentation.

TeenySod − NTA, and honestly, I wouldn't EVER tell the school you are OK with any other stuff being used either.

Speak to the principal. The parents need to supply,

and if they can't or won't then the school needs to handle it. "Emergencies" happen (e. g.

sick child means more changes than usual needed) and schools/nurseries themselves should be prepared

keep spare pullups, and clothes in various sizes

it's not like baby/toddler clothes are in short supply at charity shops

and clean and decent is all that's needed.

They can then work out billing any costs to the parents involved.

Stay out of it and shut down that entitlement instantly with a strongly worded email (get it in writing).

They suggested starting softly, in case it was an honest mix-up

Rare_Sugar_7927 − NTA depending on how you approach it.

I'd probably say to the teacher I noticed that my daughter's clothes weren't all returned in her pack,

and that I think I saw her tee on another child.

Ask what happened, it might have been a genuine mistake that someone grabbed the wrong pack.

Basically give them a chance to explain.

If they say yeah we put whatever clothes on whichever kid, then I'd be asking them not to do that.

Galaxy6611 − NTA. Maybe there was a mixup but it should still be addressed.

It would have been less awkward if you brought it up immediately

but it's still a valid concern. I'd also suggest labeling them from now on just to be safe.

maybe even putting them in a zip lock with their name on it as well.

Personally I would be upset on either end of the spectrum loosing the clothes

and having someone else's childs clothes put on my child not knowing what is made of,

what detergent was used, if they are even clean, ect

cassquach1990 − Preschool teacher here, did you check to make sure it was your child’s shirt on another student?

Pretty often multiple students have similar or identical items of clothing.

It could be that the shirt was put on by accident as well; was it labeled?

If it was done on purpose that is absolutely not okay - one time in an extreme situation

I sent a child home in our dress up clothes because my spares ran out again,

but I would never intentionally put another child’s clothes on someone else.

These users highlighted how expensive kids’ clothes are for families

CrabbiestAsp − NTA. They shouldn't be sharing items like that.

I understand some parents might not pack enough, but what if you can only just afford what you pack.

The centre needs to fix this issue within themselves, not with what is packed for other kids.

Golden_Tails − Our daycare used wipes, diapers and pull ups as needed but the clothes,

I'd be mad if they gave her clothes away. NTA.

In the end, most readers agreed this wasn’t about being unkind; it was about setting reasonable boundaries in a space built on trust. While many sympathized with the pressures teachers face, they also felt parents shouldn’t quietly absorb the cost of systemic issues.

Do you think the mom should address it directly, or let it slide as a first-week hiccup? Where would you draw the line between sharing and overstepping? Share your thoughts below.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 3/3 votes | 100%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/3 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/3 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/3 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/3 votes | 0%

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

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