Anonymous wrote:Nannies under 25? Not in our neighborhood. Grown up women who mostly raised their own kids get nanny jobs where I live.
Anonymous wrote:“Implode your kids life?”
Way to overstate things. You sound a bit unhinged yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She wants to be in control so she can make sure things are in her comfort zone and easiest for her. Over the years she’s learned how to manipulate moms. It’s not that she wants to replace a mom. It’s because she wants to be in complete control and not have you make decisions as to where and when she’s going to be doing things…. Very common. Make sure that you set boundaries.
Wow, what a weird take on this.
Manipulate? Wtf.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guess I’m the minority here, but I don’t think you sound unhinged. Her age and your age and just not compatible. She’s doing what a lot of people find positive behavior, but doesn’t work for you. You don’t have to deal with it. I’d find someone else. It’s okay that you match better with a younger nanny. I have a friend who got rid of her nanny because she was too pretty and made her feel insecure. It’s hard enough to work full time and raise a family. Don’t make things harder if you have control of who you hire.
Thank you. This is where I'm at. This nanny is too close to my age, doesn't have many friends of her own and isn't close to her own family and it feels like she's creeping into my life and overstepping the role that I want. I never felt like this with our last nanny who we had for many years until she retired. She planned play dates all the time and it was a non-issue. In the end, I guess I don't need any other reason to let her go other than it's not a good fit for me. And all the points about me potentially working too much and needing to cut back are probably also correct.
Just stay home aalllll daaaay.
Better to be a shy nanny, with not much friends, people who has a lot of friends just are mostly haters and jealous people.
It's better to have a small circle abs not a lot of fake friends
Anonymous wrote:She wants to be in control so she can make sure things are in her comfort zone and easiest for her. Over the years she’s learned how to manipulate moms. It’s not that she wants to replace a mom. It’s because she wants to be in complete control and not have you make decisions as to where and when she’s going to be doing things…. Very common. Make sure that you set boundaries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t even know what “boundaries” would look like here- “please don’t talk to other parents in the dance waiting room?”
“Please don’t accept any birthday invitations.”
“Please don’t make any play dates for Larla.”
“Please don’t speak to any of the other parents.”
Then I want you to come back to us and report back if she’ll be available for you on those spur of the moment late nights that you seem to enjoy. Or if she’s going to stay late when you have something to do after work.
OP. I don't use her for "spur of the moment late nights". I plan things out in advance and part it was part of the job description. Never goes over 40 hours. Look, I've never had a nanny get birthday party invites directly or gossip with my neighbors and have it get back to me. I've had another nanny who did a great job with playdates and I appreciated it. This one is different. Apparently giving more facts is considered "trolling" and the fact that I am annoyed with the way she has inserted herself into my life makes me seem "unhinged". I am leaning more toward just finding a new nanny and also cutting back on work. I've never felt like this before and something is off here. I can't tie it to anything else going on in my life right now. Maybe it's simply a personality conflict.
Anonymous wrote:We have a nanny in her mid-thirties who never had kids of her own. She's pretty good but not great. We've had different nannies for 12 years now - she's better than most: she's almost always available when we need her for a later night or if we want to get away for an overnight trip she can do it. My issue is that she's starting to insert herself into what should be "my" role as a mom - like she directly plans play dates and is getting birthday party invites directly from other parents for my youngest. She sits around chatting with moms at school and extracurricular activities. I'm starting to want to just fire her and stay home with my last kid. I've never felt this way before. I actually like-to-love my job that I've spent my entire life working to create. I also hate the idea of becoming financially dependent on my spouse. Our marriage is mostly good but we've had some trials. I've just never felt this way about a nanny before, mostly because I've never had one who overstepped in this way. I also feel like she's become overly attached to my youngest, like I have this fear of her running away with my child. Again, never before in 12 years have I felt like this before.
Am I being ridiculous here? Any dealt with this?