• Am I The A’hole? (AITA)
  • Mom Refuses To Pick Up Her Ex’s Daughter From School, Even After The Teacher Begs Her To

    Mom Refuses To Pick Up Her Ex’s Daughter From School, Even After The Teacher Begs Her To

    Co-parenting is rarely simple, especially when infidelity and blended families are involved. Boundaries become fragile, and even small requests can carry years of emotional baggage.

    That’s exactly what one mom faced when her ex secretly added her to the school pickup list for his daughter, the child he had during the affair that ended their marriage. When the school called and asked her to take both kids home, she refused. Now, her ex and his wife are furious, accusing her of cruelty. But she insists she was just protecting her boundaries.

    A mom sparked a firestorm by refusing to pick up her ex’s daughter, born from his affair, when she went to get their shared son from school

    Mom Refuses To Pick Up Her Ex’s Daughter From School, Even After The Teacher Begs Her To
    not the actual photo

    'AITA for not picking up my ex's daughter from school when I picked up our son?'

    Ex cheated on me when I was pregnant with our son (8) and because of this he has a daughter (8) with his affair partner, now wife.

    We are not on good terms and I do not have a relationship with my ex's daughter.

    I have never spoken a word to her or spent any significant time in her presence. Ex and I split custody (50-50) of our son.

    Two weeks ago, I got a call from the school during his custody time, stating nobody had picked our son up from school and asking if I would.

    When I got to the school my ex's daughter was also there and the teacher was with her.

    She told me I was on the approved list for pick up for ex's daughter and would I take both kids.

    I said no and I told her I did not want to be on the list as I would never pick the other child up from school.

    She told me she would pass the word along and it would be taken care of and I had to call to follow up on this.

    My ex never told me he or his wife added me to the authorized pickup list for his daughter.

    When he realized I had not picked up his daughter with our son he was furious.

    He asked me how I could leave her behind when I would have our son unplanned anyway.

    I told him via our parenting app that I picked up our son as I would always do if needed but his daughter is not my child and I will...

    According to him my ex's daughter was there until 7 because I refused to pick her up with our son.

    She's a child and I understand that's not ideal. I don't feel bad per say but I wonder if I would be considered an a__hole for being unwilling to do...

    This is not something I want to be a regular thing and it's the first time it ever happened.

    Ex's wife was apparently delayed out of town and ex was working. AITA?

     

    Let’s call it what it is: boundary collapse. OP never agreed to be responsible for that daughter, and yet her name was added to the school’s approved pickup list without consent. That raises legal and psychological red flags.

    Legal & Custody Angle

    In many jurisdictions, school pickup lists are treated separately from custody rights. The school may comply with whoever is authorized, but that doesn’t always mean the person has legal responsibility for that child.

    Unless a court order says otherwise, there’s no automatic duty to pick up a child who isn’t yours. Schools generally won’t enforce custody agreements; they simply follow their rules about who is allowed to collect kids.

    When shared custody is in play, many legal experts argue that each parent is responsible for their own child’s transportation unless the custody plan states otherwise. (Family Matters Law Firm PLLC) In short, OP likely had no legal obligation to step into someone else’s parenting role at that moment.

    Psychological, Family Systems & Boundaries

    Family systems theory warns against triangulation when people insert a third party to carry messages, burdens, or conflict.

    Here, ex may be treating OP as a fallback “safe adult” for the daughter, pulling her into a role she never agreed to. That’s emotionally manipulative, even if subtle.

    Blended family research notes boundary ambiguity, confusion about who belongs in what role within a family, causes tension and conflict in step or bonus families. OP was thrust into a boundary-ambiguous role she never accepted.

    Psychologists emphasize that step relationships require time, trust, and consensual role negotiation. A person forced into a parental duty they never chose can breed resentment, emotional harm, or burnout.

    What Could OP Do (without being villainized)

    1. Document everything: school correspondences, pick-up rules, the moment she was added to that list without consent.
    2. Notify the school formally: request removal from that daughter’s authorized list and insist on prior permission if ever asked again.
    3. Clarify roles in the custody agreement: ask a mediator or lawyer to put language stating she is not responsible for the other child’s transport.
    4. Communicate with ex (if possible): direct, calm, boundary-based, explaining, “I will not assume responsibility for a child I am not legally or emotionally connected to.”
    5. Stay consistent: refuse further pickups, but remain reliable with her own son. That consistency shows it’s not spite, it’s boundary.

    These are the responses from Reddit users:

    Redditors slammed the ex’s audacity for adding her to the pickup list without asking

     

    jrm1102 − NTA - I feel bad for that other kid but thats not your responsibility at all.

    Also, him not picking up your kid… that's bad. Make sure you document that in case you need to rework custody.

    TheWacoFogey − NTA. They added you to the list without asking you first? The AUDACITY,

    especially considering the circumstances of the divorce. "Ex was working," eh?

    Then he can jolly well leave work to handle his own responsibilities rather than saddle you with them. Invite them to kiss both sides of your ass and grow the...

    These folks pinned the daughter’s late pickup on the ex’s failure, not her refusal, calling him out for neglecting both kids

    Trailsya − According to him, my ex's daughter was there until 7 because I refused to pick her up with our son.

    Eh no? This was not BECAUSE of you. He should have gone himself.

    Cute-Profession9983 − Wow, he can't even pick up his affair baby. Nor can his affair partner. Sad for the kid, but this is all on your POS ex

    This group praised her use of a parenting app and grey-rocking, urging her to ignore his guilt trips and document his lapses for custody purposes

    Calm_Initial − Does his wife not have the ability to call someone and say “Oh I’m delayed and will be hours late, can you pick up my child?”

    Or even contact her own husband to arrange for someone to get the kids?

    Critical-Affect4762 − I love that you already use a parenting app. Just follow the custody order, use grey rock method and keep on moving.

    He can't coordinate picking his kids up from school. So clearly his opinion is null. Lol what a lil weenie.

    Seriously, look up grey rocking. He texts about the kids being there until 7, and I would completely ignore it.

    It's like some stranger person expecting you to care about their life and be codependent with them. Like, no thanks?

    Some commenters questioned why the ex or his wife couldn’t arrange childcare

    ShadyPossumDealings − And why couldn't he or his wife pick up the kids? Does the wife pick up your son as well during dad's time, or is it always dad?

    Certain_Accident3382 − Until 7? My 13 yo's school would be reaching out to *me* at 5, and then Cops and local services by 5:15,

    let alone the chaos my 8 yo's school would kickstart if I wasn't there by 4. That is n__lect of both children on HIS part.

    The right person could even spin it as abandonment. Document the hell out of this, and consider returning to court to amend custody.

    He is not a safe parent, and neither is that girls mother. Hell, if the school is trying to just chuck her at you

    with nothing more than "since you're here" and no legal tie, I'd reconsider if it was an actual safe place for my child as well.

    These Redditors emphasized that the daughter isn’t her responsibility and warned that picking her up could set a precedent for future demands

    Tall_Hospital1071 − Although I agree that the daughter is innocent, she is NOT your child, your son is.

    Therefore, you have no legal responsibility over her, and you don’t owe your cheating ex anything,

    not even to make up for his poor organization and poor parenting, it seems.

    That little girl has two functioning parents, neither of them was able to call the school to let them at least know they couldn’t pick her up.

    They had the BALLS to put you on the picking up list for their affair child because she happened to be in the same school as your son.

    It’s convenient for them, as if this happening isn’t literally because your ex decided to put his d__k in another woman

    conceiving another kid through infidelity while you were literally carrying his son.

    The fact you also don’t even have any cordial relationship with your ex and only communicate through a parenting app and he thought it was okay to put you in...

    Now I’m asking what you were supposed to do with the kid if you had decided to pick her up? Were you supposed to bring the kid? At your house?

    When you and the girl are basically strangers to each other? Absolutely not.

    You need to have your name removed from the list ASAP and ask for the school

    to never allow your name to be put on anything or anywhere for things related to the little girl, and to call beforehand from now on.

    Because if your ex did this without any bother, some people have some huge audacity and absolutely no shame, I gotta give them that.

    Shai7809 − NTA - I suspect if you had picked up his daughter as well, you'd be doing it again in the future. That's why they put you on the...

    The child deserved care, but the responsibility wasn’t hers to bear. Reddit applauded the woman for refusing to let guilt rewrite her boundaries, proving that compassion doesn’t mean self-sacrifice.

    So, what do you think? Should she have helped “just this once,” or was standing her ground the only sane choice after years of broken trust? Would you have done the same in her shoes?

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