Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two-dad family. Two preschoolers. Nanny has worked 50-60 hours a week since the oldest was born. In the last year the kids have started to call the nanny “mommy” at times, always in an exaggerated baby voice so it’s not like they think it is her name, they are just saying it in the same way that they would pretend to play house or put on a stern voice to be a bad guy when playing superhero. What do you think about this? Does it need to be addressed or is it something that can just be ignored?
Real question: How would you get them to stop calling their "mommy" figure, Mommy? Why are you threatened? Why does it matter? This is the downsides of working all the time and having no mom around.
Children of working parents have been shown to be more successful when they are older. That's the upside.
How do you define sucessfull? And you ignored my questions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two-dad family. Two preschoolers. Nanny has worked 50-60 hours a week since the oldest was born. In the last year the kids have started to call the nanny “mommy” at times, always in an exaggerated baby voice so it’s not like they think it is her name, they are just saying it in the same way that they would pretend to play house or put on a stern voice to be a bad guy when playing superhero. What do you think about this? Does it need to be addressed or is it something that can just be ignored?
Real question: How would you get them to stop calling their "mommy" figure, Mommy? Why are you threatened? Why does it matter? This is the downsides of working all the time and having no mom around.
Children of working parents have been shown to be more successful when they are older. That's the upside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two-dad family. Two preschoolers. Nanny has worked 50-60 hours a week since the oldest was born. In the last year the kids have started to call the nanny “mommy” at times, always in an exaggerated baby voice so it’s not like they think it is her name, they are just saying it in the same way that they would pretend to play house or put on a stern voice to be a bad guy when playing superhero. What do you think about this? Does it need to be addressed or is it something that can just be ignored?
Real question: How would you get them to stop calling their "mommy" figure, Mommy? Why are you threatened? Why does it matter? This is the downsides of working all the time and having no mom around.
Anonymous wrote:I have a vested interest in the well being of children with the astute recognition that parents have to work for a living. Just like people who sell food have a vested interest in people who eat food.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PS don't listen to the posters about working too much or the kids needing a mom. The kids need parent(s) who love and care for them. That's it.
Except you're a nanny so you have a vested interest. You need people to think like that.
Anonymous wrote:Two-dad family. Two preschoolers. Nanny has worked 50-60 hours a week since the oldest was born. In the last year the kids have started to call the nanny “mommy” at times, always in an exaggerated baby voice so it’s not like they think it is her name, they are just saying it in the same way that they would pretend to play house or put on a stern voice to be a bad guy when playing superhero. What do you think about this? Does it need to be addressed or is it something that can just be ignored?
I have a vested interest in the well being of children with the astute recognition that parents have to work for a living. Just like people who sell food have a vested interest in people who eat food.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PS don't listen to the posters about working too much or the kids needing a mom. The kids need parent(s) who love and care for them. That's it.
Except you're a nanny so you have a vested interest. You need people to think like that.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I’m a hetero mom, and when I head my daughter call someone else mommy my heart dropped and my head almost spun 360 degrees in jealousy. I was talked down.
What you’re feeling is normal! I playfully grabbed her and held her up in the air and was like “HEY! Listen little girl there is only one mama mamba in this house and that’s me you got it?!” She giggled and said I’m the mamba, you’re the baby! And ran away.
She once told me she wanted a different mommy and my lip trembled as my sister redirected. I held it together in the moment but I cried into my pillow like a teenage girl when I went to sleep that night.
Last when I was little and asked my mom where I came from, she told me the cabbage patch. I seriously thought I was picked out of a cabbage patch. Hopefully this brings all of my experiences full circle.
Yes, I’ve had therapy and we are all fine now.![]()
The joys of parenting!
Anonymous wrote:It’s totally normal and very common for kids to call a nanny or care giver mommy. I work daycare and so many kids have called me mommy at some point . It’s not that they think I’m their mom but it’s what they referred to me because I am the main female caregiver. Ignore.[/quote
+1 At school, younger kids frequently refer to their nanny as mommy or mom.]
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t worry about it. First it sounds like they’re playing and second, this happens with heterosexual parents, single parents...hell my younger sister (14 years younger) called me mommy a bunch of times when she was a toddler.
Anonymous wrote:PS don't listen to the posters about working too much or the kids needing a mom. The kids need parent(s) who love and care for them. That's it.