Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the 13-year-old was very good and responsible. Sure he missed his bus, but I assume there was another one coming in 30 minutes. If he was truly uncomfortable with the situation but didn't speak up, he may want to practice being more assertive in the future.
The nanny's actions seem not particularly responsible, not because a random stranger *you* approach for help is likely to harm your child (probability of that? < 0.0001%) but because the person she approached was so young and clearly waiting for a bus. However, we don't know what kind of emergency lead her to take her chances like this. And clearly she picked the right guy.
If she was my nanny I would want to know if she made a habit of this, but a single incident, provided it involved a legitimate emergency, would not worry me at all.
Nope. I'd fire her. Right then, right there.
I can see maybe leaving a dog tied to a post or even with a stranger if I had to pop into a school real quick. But a child? No way. Why on earth couldn't the woman bring the child into the school with her. It just makes no sense. Sounds more like laziness than an emergency to me...
Are you F'ing kidding me? You would be okay with your nanny leaving your child with a stranger? I agree with the other poster, she/he would be fired immedietaly.Anonymous wrote:I think the 13-year-old was very good and responsible. Sure he missed his bus, but I assume there was another one coming in 30 minutes. If he was truly uncomfortable with the situation but didn't speak up, he may want to practice being more assertive in the future.
The nanny's actions seem not particularly responsible, not because a random stranger *you* approach for help is likely to harm your child (probability of that? < 0.0001%) but because the person she approached was so young and clearly waiting for a bus. However, we don't know what kind of emergency lead her to take her chances like this. And clearly she picked the right guy.
If she was my nanny I would want to know if she made a habit of this, but a single incident, provided it involved a legitimate emergency, would not worry me at all.
Anonymous wrote:I think the 13-year-old was very good and responsible. Sure he missed his bus, but I assume there was another one coming in 30 minutes. If he was truly uncomfortable with the situation but didn't speak up, he may want to practice being more assertive in the future.
The nanny's actions seem not particularly responsible, not because a random stranger *you* approach for help is likely to harm your child (probability of that? < 0.0001%) but because the person she approached was so young and clearly waiting for a bus. However, we don't know what kind of emergency lead her to take her chances like this. And clearly she picked the right guy.
If she was my nanny I would want to know if she made a habit of this, but a single incident, provided it involved a legitimate emergency, would not worry me at all.
Anonymous wrote:um, that is a hard one. When I first read it, I was thinking like an earlier poster that this could have been a ploye to divert the kid's attention while some guy in a car snatched the 13 year old. (I'm paranoid since I've only ever lived in a city all of my life and have been a crime victim myself).
Under the circumstances, if this is a true story -- the 13 year old boy is more mature than 99% of boys I know of that age.
Anonymous wrote:The kid was wrong. He should have said " sorry,I can't watch your dog, kid because I am waiting for my bus and don't want to miss it.
A little bit of assertiveness would go a long way, which is needed especially when you leave him alone at a bus stop for any perpetrator.
Anonymous wrote:Ok whatever, you will be the one crying when something happens.
Oh and look at his judgement today, he missed his bus because he couldnt stand up for himself. Thank goodness that was not a kidnapper.
Anonymous wrote:Ok whatever, you will be the one crying when something happens.
Oh and look at his judgement today, he missed his bus because he couldnt stand up for himself. Thank goodness that was not a kidnapper.