An Oklahoma father says police were called on him during a road trip stop after he escorted his two young daughters into a women’s restroom at a QuikTrip convenience store. He shared a video of the interaction, sparking an online debate over where parents should take children when traveling alone. According to the father, TikTok creator Tyler Brodsky (@tylerbrodsky2), in his first video, the family stopped while traveling. In the video’s caption, he wrote that he took his daughters into the women’s restroom because it was empty. “I’d rather do that than bring two little girls into a men’s bathroom full of grown men and dirty stalls,” Brodsky added. Video from the encounter shows a man speaking to a police dispatcher while standing near the restroom entrance. The caller tells dispatch there is “a man with his two little girls using the women’s bathroom.” The footage shows him remaining on the phone while waiting for officers to arrive. Officers arrived, no clear law broken The video shows Brodsky helping his daughter wash and dry her hands while an exchange unfolds between the adults. At one point, Brodsky identifies himself as the children’s father and tells the man, “I’m their dad. You can ask her,” apparently referring to a QuikTrip employee standing nearby. The caller can also be heard telling dispatch that a woman waiting to use the restroom could not enter. Later in the recording, the caller describes Brodsky to the police and asks officers to arrive quickly. @tylerbrodsky2 Y’all make this man famous. We stopped at a QuikTrip on our road trip from Florida back to Oklahoma so my daughters could use the restroom. The women’s restroom was empty, so I took them in. I’d rather do that than bring two little girls into a men’s bathroom full of grown men and dirty stalls. This guy comes barging in yelling, scares my daughters, and somehow thinks THEY should’ve been in the men’s room instead. Am I wrong here? #GirlDad #RoadTrip #parenting #fyp #viral ♬ original sound – Tyler Brodsky In a follow-up TikTok video, Brodsky said three police officers arrived within about five minutes and quickly de-escalated the situation. According to Brodsky, officers told those involved that the situation was not necessarily clear-cut. “They pointed out that taking two little girls into the men’s restroom could be viewed just as negatively as me being in the women’s restroom with my girls,” Brodsky said in the follow-up video. Brodsky said officers informed him that he had not broken any rules. Cops ultimately asked the other man to leave the store. Brodsky also praised a QuikTrip manager named Melissa, saying she stepped in during the incident, checked on his daughters, and helped calm the situation. “What happened next is what I’ll remember the most,” Brodsky said. He explained that officers spoke directly with his daughters and reassured them they were safe. Oklahoma law does not prohibit a parent from accompanying a young child into an opposite-sex restroom at a private business. The state’s restroom restrictions primarily apply to public schools and do not specifically address parents assisting children in public facilities. According to Brodsky, QuikTrip employees later gave his daughters free frozen drinks before the family continued their drive home. The father said the viral response revealed how often parents and caregivers face difficult decisions when accompanying children to public restrooms. Brodsky also urged viewers not to harass anyone involved. He said he shared the experience only to start a broader conversation about parenting and public expectations.