Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really disagree with the cold turkey posters. To go from Mom 24/7 to no Mom at all will really stress your daughter out. I think the easiest way to transition is for you and the nanny to take care of her together for a few days while she gets used to the nanny. Then you start sitting at your kitchen table and working and not really paying attention to her so she will naturally start gravitating to the nanny who is able to give her full attention. When she is comfortable with the nanny then start going into another room.
Before I was a preschool teacher I would have said this same thing—gradual to not upset the kid. Now that I’m a teacher I agree with the PPs who said to go to your room and not come out the rest of the day. Nanny shouldn’t let the daughter come up to the door even. The drawing it out tactic will just lengthen the stress your clingy daughter will go through. It’s not like she’ll never see mom, she just won’t see mom during working hours.
Anonymous wrote:I really disagree with the cold turkey posters. To go from Mom 24/7 to no Mom at all will really stress your daughter out. I think the easiest way to transition is for you and the nanny to take care of her together for a few days while she gets used to the nanny. Then you start sitting at your kitchen table and working and not really paying attention to her so she will naturally start gravitating to the nanny who is able to give her full attention. When she is comfortable with the nanny then start going into another room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need a room with a door. Bring food in with you, leave only if they go outside.
Yes. If you have the room for an in-home office, get yourself a mini dorm fridge and a small microwave. Put lunches and snacks in the fridge. In the morning, you say goodbye like you would at daycare, head to the office and close the door. Nanny can call mommy on the phone if needed, so that your child understands that you need to be called to get your attention, she can't just go to the office and interrupt. At that age, it also helps to reinforce the "out of sight, out of mind" mindset so that she learns to think of you as "at the office".
Obviously you don't need to do all that, but it helps to keep you out of her sight. Any chance sight of you, including you coming down to get your lunch, will remind her that you are there, and make her want you and your attention.
Anonymous wrote:You need a room with a door. Bring food in with you, leave only if they go outside.
Anonymous wrote:Be firm with your daughter and shut yourself in the room where you will work. She'll eventually figure out that mommy's working and now is time with nanny.