Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid gets super attached to caregivers and really moody after transitions away from them. I would put him back in activities and reinforce that people come in and out of our lives but he is always loved. Can he FaceTime or write to the nanny?
We cut out the FaceTimes because it was causing too much drama.
Seems cut and dry is the best approach. Too emotional.
I feel so badly for your poor son. He’s lost someone who he was close to, and instead of helping him through it you are dismissing him as being “too emotional”. You are awful. The regression will be over more quickly if you acknowledge to him how hard this is, and help him process the emotions instead of dismissing and minimizing them. You’re not the worst mother ever, but you’re not great.
She cares enough to think about it quite a bit and even came here for advice. She's a great mother.
get lost little ms (im)perfect and seek help for your holier than thou disorder.
Hi OP!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid gets super attached to caregivers and really moody after transitions away from them. I would put him back in activities and reinforce that people come in and out of our lives but he is always loved. Can he FaceTime or write to the nanny?
We cut out the FaceTimes because it was causing too much drama.
Seems cut and dry is the best approach. Too emotional.
I feel so badly for your poor son. He’s lost someone who he was close to, and instead of helping him through it you are dismissing him as being “too emotional”. You are awful. The regression will be over more quickly if you acknowledge to him how hard this is, and help him process the emotions instead of dismissing and minimizing them. You’re not the worst mother ever, but you’re not great.
She cares enough to think about it quite a bit and even came here for advice. She's a great mother.
get lost little ms (im)perfect and seek help for your holier than thou disorder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid gets super attached to caregivers and really moody after transitions away from them. I would put him back in activities and reinforce that people come in and out of our lives but he is always loved. Can he FaceTime or write to the nanny?
We cut out the FaceTimes because it was causing too much drama.
Seems cut and dry is the best approach. Too emotional.
I feel so badly for your poor son. He’s lost someone who he was close to, and instead of helping him through it you are dismissing him as being “too emotional”. You are awful. The regression will be over more quickly if you acknowledge to him how hard this is, and help him process the emotions instead of dismissing and minimizing them. You’re not the worst mother ever, but you’re not great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid gets super attached to caregivers and really moody after transitions away from them. I would put him back in activities and reinforce that people come in and out of our lives but he is always loved. Can he FaceTime or write to the nanny?
We cut out the FaceTimes because it was causing too much drama.
Seems cut and dry is the best approach. Too emotional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid gets super attached to caregivers and really moody after transitions away from them. I would put him back in activities and reinforce that people come in and out of our lives but he is always loved. Can he FaceTime or write to the nanny?
We cut out the FaceTimes because it was causing too much drama.
Seems cut and dry is the best approach. Too emotional.
I feel so badly for your poor son. He’s lost someone who he was close to, and instead of helping him through it you are dismissing him as being “too emotional”. You are awful. The regression will be over more quickly if you acknowledge to him how hard this is, and help him process the emotions instead of dismissing and minimizing them. You’re not the worst mother ever, but you’re not great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP— respectfully, your answers seem to suggest that you are being dismissive of your son’s attachment to your former nanny. In fact, your son is acting just the way grief makes a person of that age act.
Right?! OP is all over far fetched possibilities like sleep apnea when the obvious answer is her son was extremely attached to the nanny (which he should be).
OP, get over your insecurity, put on your big girl panties, and be a parent. In this case it means helping your son process the fact that the nanny has left.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP— respectfully, your answers seem to suggest that you are being dismissive of your son’s attachment to your former nanny. In fact, your son is acting just the way grief makes a person of that age act.
Right?! OP is all over far fetched possibilities like sleep apnea when the obvious answer is her son was extremely attached to the nanny (which he should be).
OP, get over your insecurity, put on your big girl panties, and be a parent. In this case it means helping your son process the fact that the nanny has left.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid gets super attached to caregivers and really moody after transitions away from them. I would put him back in activities and reinforce that people come in and out of our lives but he is always loved. Can he FaceTime or write to the nanny?
We cut out the FaceTimes because it was causing too much drama.
Seems cut and dry is the best approach. Too emotional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 6 year old had a couple night time accidents but I think it’s because he is tired out from day camp. I’m still confused about why he needs monitoring to such an extent that you would drop all activities. Did the supervisors recommend he be pulled?
I’ve seen a shift in my rising 1st grader - increased pickiness in eating, more defiance, bossy with other kids, waaaailing when a little hurt, etc. But I attribute that to summer time. His routines are all different, he doesn’t have the structure of school, is physically wiped out from outdoor activities and camp, and he’s of the age where he wants to start saying no and making decisions just for the sake of it.
I’m wondering if it’s just the age too. Thinking back a lot of my anxiety manifested around first grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was he not having any bathroom accidents before? How many times has he had an accident recently?
Nope.
He was potty trained at 2.5 but still needed a nighttime pull-up till 4. Zero accidents since 4.5.
I would definitely bring back the pull-ups for nighttime. Make sure he understands it’s not a punishment and there are a lot of kids who need them. Tell him if he can stay dry for a week with no accidents then he can try sleeping without them.
Anonymous wrote:OP— respectfully, your answers seem to suggest that you are being dismissive of your son’s attachment to your former nanny. In fact, your son is acting just the way grief makes a person of that age act.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid gets super attached to caregivers and really moody after transitions away from them. I would put him back in activities and reinforce that people come in and out of our lives but he is always loved. Can he FaceTime or write to the nanny?
We cut out the FaceTimes because it was causing too much drama.
Seems cut and dry is the best approach. Too emotional.