Anonymous wrote:Do you think this is his way of getting one on one time with you, even if you’re working? What if you offer him outside with the nanny in exchange for going to pick up dinner with you alone after, or something?
Anonymous wrote:Independent playtime! Set his room up so it’s safe for him to be there unsupervised (attach furniture to the walls, etc) and let him play, by himself, for increasing amounts of time. Teach him that he must stay in his room, and is not to interrupt you unless it’s an emergency. Give him tons of praise when he succeeds. Start with 5 or 10 minutes. I bet you can quickly work your way up to a full hour, which might really save you. And it’s a great skill to have.
Anonymous wrote:2 kids, 4 & 7. They've had the same nanny for a couple years and the same group of neighborhood friends they've played with for a long time. He knows and likes everyone.
Once he started back in school full time, he stopped wanting to play in the afternoons. I get it. He's probably tired! But my 7 year old does want to go out and play, and I have to work.
I haven't pushed the issue and have just let him hang out around the house and entertain himself while the nanny goes out with my older DS. But sometimes he interrupts so it's not always ideal.
Today I had a meeting where it would have been extremely embarrassing to be interrupted, so I forced him to go outside. He was absolutely sobbing and I felt terrible! I asked him why and he couldn't really say why.
Any thoughts on how to handle this? Was I awful to force him to go out to play?