The original poster (OP), a 44-year-old Black-identifying man with a Japanese partner, was at a store with three of his children: an 11-year-old son and twin 3-year-old daughters. While shopping, the two younger girls began to cry and have a tantrum after the OP denied their request for candy.
The OP, who is large in stature and deaf, picked up one of his daughters to leave the store. This action led to a woman yelling about kidnapping, followed by a man punching the OP and snatching the child. Police arrived quickly, and before the OP could explain his situation or have his son translate, he was arrested and handcuffed while his children were taken into custody. The OP is now debating whether he should stop taking his light-skinned daughter into public settings without his partner present due to fear of future incidents.

WIBTA If I stopped taking my daughter in public









As noted by sociologist Dr. Elijah Anderson, concerning issues of race and public space, “Race structures the everyday encounters of people, shaping who is seen as a threat and who is seen as belonging.” This situation powerfully illustrates how racialized perceptions, combined with physical characteristics (the father’s large size and deafness), can instantly transform a routine parenting moment into a life-threatening confrontation.
The OP’s decision to potentially restrict his public parenting is a direct response to a perceived threat to his life and liberty, a phenomenon often discussed in terms of ‘protective self-regulation’ under conditions of systemic bias. His fear is validated by the immediate escalation to physical violence and police intervention based on a third party’s misinterpretation of his actions. While this proposed solution seeks to eliminate the risk to himself, it places an unfair burden of limitation on both the father and the child, restricting their normal family activities.
The OP’s actions in managing the tantrum were standard parenting practice; the catastrophic outcome was dictated by external, biased assumptions. While the immediate impulse to retreat from public view is understandable from a survival standpoint, a more constructive long-term approach involves proactive steps to mitigate misinterpretation, such as carrying clear identification, using visual aids to communicate deafness, and seeking community support or legal counsel to address repeated police harassment rather than limiting the child’s experiences.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.
































The poster is facing an extreme dilemma rooted in justifiable fear stemming from past dangerous encounters involving racial bias and misunderstanding in public. His proposed action—avoiding public outings with his daughter without his partner as a visual identifier—is an attempt to preempt violence and protect his parental rights.
The central question is whether restricting the daughter’s public life based on the father’s safety concerns constitutes an overreaction or an understandable protective measure given the documented risks he faces. Is the OP justified in limiting his own presence with his daughter to ensure his physical safety and continued presence in her life?







