Man Refuses To Regret His Reaction After A Teacher Publicly Shamed His Child

Most parents would agree that school rules should be reasonable, but what happens when a teacher’s policy feels more like a power trip?

This original poster OP’s son found himself caught between a “one-trip-per-day” bathroom rule and his own physical needs.

Encouraged by his father to ignore the restriction, the boy ended up at the center of a classroom-wide shaming session that left his father absolutely livid.

When the teacher called home, presumably to discipline the student, she was met with a verbal firestorm. The OP “let her have it,” cussing her out for bullying a ten-year-old until she eventually hung up.

While the OP feels he was simply standing up for his son against a bully, his wife believes the verbal abuse was uncalled for, regardless of the teacher’s behavior.

Read the full story to see if the community thinks the OP was right to “go nuclear” or if he should have kept his cool for the sake of the upcoming transfer.

Father defends his son after a teacher humiliates him for using the restroom

Man Refuses To Regret His Reaction After A Teacher Publicly Shamed His Child
not the actual photo

'AITA for cussing out my sons teacher?'

I (38M) have a son (10M). My son has always hated his teacher, Ms Lopez.

According to my son, Ms Lopez is always yelling at everyone, she humiliates people,

and she’s really strict for no reason.

My son is a good kid, so she usually leaves him alone,

but if she ever did something I would jump into action.

What happened really recently was my son really had to use the restroom in her class.

Ms Lopez has a rule where you can only go to the bathroom once a day in her class.

You’ll have to wait till lunch or recess to go.

My son had already went so she wouldn’t let him go.

I told my son beforehand that if she ever tries to enforce this dumb rule on him,

just go anyways and me and his mother will take care of it if he gets in trouble.

So he went anyways.

My son had told me that by the time he got back,

ms Lopez was making fun of him in front of the entire class.

Saying how he was about to have a pee pee accident.

She started yelling at him telling him that she was going to call his parents later.

I was appalled to hear this all from my son as soon as he got home.

He’s not a liar.

By the time ms Lopez called, I picked up the phone and I let her have it.

How dare she humiliate a 10 year old boy in front of the entire class and try to bully him.

She should be ashamed. She hung up in my face about 40 seconds into the rant.

My wife told me I shouldn’t have cussed her out.

She agreed to take the steps to get him moved out of ms Lopez class,

but me cussing her out was uncalled for according to her. AITA?

In this situation, OP (38M) is understandably upset about how his son was treated by his teacher, Ms. Lopez, especially since his son had to go to the bathroom and was denied the chance, resulting in humiliation in front of his classmates.

It’s clear that OP feels deeply protective of his son, and the emotional reaction is rooted in wanting to defend him from what he perceives as unnecessary and hurtful treatment.

From OP’s perspective, the actions of Ms. Lopez were unacceptable, particularly because the teacher humiliated a young child over something that could have easily been resolved in a more empathetic way.

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The rule about bathroom visits seems overly strict, and when a child is physically uncomfortable, their needs should be addressed with understanding. The fact that she made fun of his son in front of others added to OP’s sense of injustice.

OP’s emotional response in the heat of the moment led to him cussing the teacher out, which, while understandable given the circumstances, may not have been the most productive way to handle the situation.

From a different perspective, Ms. Lopez may have felt justified in enforcing the rule she set in place, believing it was important for discipline and structure.

However, she failed to read the situation with empathy or consider the child’s physical discomfort. While strictness may have been her approach, the way she publicly humiliated the child instead of handling the situation calmly and privately was inappropriate and damaging.

Public shaming, especially in front of peers, can deeply affect a child’s self-esteem and confidence.

Psychologically speaking, kids need to feel supported and understood, especially in situations where they are vulnerable, such as needing to use the restroom or dealing with stress. Humiliating them in front of others only serves to reinforce feelings of shame and distress.

While OP’s frustration is justified, the manner in which he handled the phone call with Ms. Lopez may not have been the most effective method to resolve the issue.

Resorting to name-calling and cussing out a teacher could escalate the conflict and make it harder to reach a constructive solution. It’s important for both parents and teachers to model respect and communication, even in challenging situations.

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In conclusion, while OP is not the a**hole for defending his son or being upset over the treatment, the delivery of his frustration could have been handled in a more measured way.

Instead of lashing out, OP could have calmly communicated his concerns and worked with the school to ensure a better environment for his son.

By responding with more composure, OP could have maintained the moral high ground and ensured the issue was addressed in a way that promoted positive change for his son’s education and emotional well-being.

Check out how the community responded:

This group focused on the “unreliable narrator” theory

Aynesa − Yes, yta! Has it ever occurred to you that children also lie

and exaggerate situations to make them look better and others worse?

You picked up the phone and "let her have it?"

Dear lord, did you even take a moment to consider hearing her out?

yta!

SpicyArms − You start your post saying your son has “always hated this teacher.”

Any chance a kid who hates his teacher is going to spin a story that puts her in a bad light?

YTA for not gathering more information before popping off

on the adult responsible for the education of your child.

massachusettsmama − YTA. You are an adult.

There should have been a conversation to make sure there isn't more to the story.

If you were unsatisfied after that conversation,

then you escalate to the building administrator.

If I had a dime for every parent who insisted that their child "doesn't lie."

Lol Kids do lie. They also exaggerate. On the flip side, there are bad teachers.

It was your duty as a grown up to act like one.

If your child was not telling the truth, you've just reinforced that behavior.

You've also just modeled how to handle conflict. Your wife is right.

These Redditors critiqued OP’s lack of strategy

flowerybutterfly96 − ESH. When you were first informed of the incident,

your first call should have been to the principal, requesting a meeting.

When the teacher called, you should have told her

you would speak at the requested meeting with the principal and then hang up.

Cussing her didn't make her have an epiphany about her poor teaching skills.

I understand your anger, but there are more effective ways to get your point across.

I hope your son didn't hear your tirade.

KrofftSurvivor − YTA You've never talked to the teacher about any of the concerns

that your son has raised because you don't really care about what's going on with your kid.

And then when you do decide to talk to the teacher, you actually didn't do any of that,

you just screamed at her on the phone over something that you have no clue whether

or not actually happened the way he says. I wish your wife luck

because you're probably going to be banned from the school.

This group provided a teacher’s perspective, explaining that “strict rules” often have context

mcasper96 − So like, did you try to have a conversation

with your son's teacher about this beforehand?

I'm a teacher and I have had parents question my bathroom policy before.

They come to me assuming I never let their kids go,

but I explain I just don't let them go when I am teaching them.

Between independent work, recess, lunch, etc, they get over 10 breaks/day.

If you haven't talked to your son's teacher yet, YTA.

RedditReader4031 − Did you allow the teacher to say anything before you laced into her?

Have you previously or post-incident, spoken with other parents who have kids

(past or present) with this teacher?

These users focused on the example OP is setting

BrucetheFerrisWheel − YTA time to grow up and control your emotions,

be a good role model for your kid. Wife is right.

Equivalent_Double_23 − YTA If you are not capable of having self control,

how are you able to teach your son right from wrong?

HijoDeCanela − YTA and your son played you. Congratulations.

This group pointed out that OP reaction is exactly “why teachers quit”

missy8985 − YTA You didn’t have the decency to allow the teacher to give her POV,

you didn’t calmly give your POV.

No none of those ADULT things You behaved like a CHILD

Commercial_Dust2208 − YTA- Do yoh normally make it a habbit

of not hearing the other side?

This type of behavior is why teachers quit.

If she is as bad as your son says you've just hurt your own credibility

before going through the appropriate channels

This story is a explosive collision between a “no-bathroom” policy that belongs in the dark ages and a protective father who finally reached his boiling point.

While Ms. Lopez likely viewed her one-trip-per-day rule as a way to maintain order, she crossed a massive ethical line the moment she turned a child’s basic biological needs into a weapon for public humiliation.

For a 10-year-old, being mocked about a “pee-pee accident” by an authority figure isn’t just strict, it’s borderline psychological bullying.

However, by meeting her aggression with a profanity-laced “rant,” the OP may have traded the moral high ground for a quick shot of adrenaline.

While his “mama bear” (or in this case, papa bear) instincts are 100% valid, cussing out a teacher often gives the school administration an excuse to focus on the parent’s “abusive behavior” rather than the teacher’s actual misconduct.

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It’s a classic case of a righteous cause being undermined by a messy execution.

Do you think the OP’s verbal explosion was a justifiable response to a bully in a position of power, or did he overplay his hand by losing his cool? How would you handle a teacher who thinks bathroom breaks are a privilege rather than a right? Share your hot takes below!

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