The mother substitutes are often called "Shadow Mothers". |
| See the "Happy Mother's Day" thread. |
Who taught you how to speak? Because they did it wrong. |
did what wrong? You're not making sense. |
| I am a "MANNY" and do work as a team with the kids' parents, they are awesome and they always give me presents in every single important occasion. |
They probably also consider their husband a coparent, but he's not the mother either. I am a nanny and I would find it very strange to be given a Mother's Day gift. My role in the children's lives is special and important and I am secure enough that I value my actual role of caregiver and do not need to be honored for a role I do not fill. |
I doubt the father is the primary caregiver. Are you the primary caregiver? |
I now see the kids about the same number of waking hours as the parents (4-day-per-week preschool), but yes, for a log time I spent more waking hours with them than their mother. But bein the primary caregiver did not make me their mother. I love my charges in the time that I am with them, but at any point I could just walk away. Being a caregiver means that you are responsible for the kid(s) for X hours a day. Being a mother is about being responsible TO the kid(s) every minute day or night from the time they are born until you die. Every choice a mom makes is about her kids in some way, and no mom should ever believe that she can be replaced by ANY employee, no matter how dedicated or loving. |
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Out there has a lots generous family,and their appreciated when
their not around the nanny can be a mother,or a nana everything for them ,this call Appreciated did you get that? |
| Every choice a mom makes is about her kids? Really? |
| Wow! I've been a nanny for 20 years and have never heard of giving a nanny a Mother's Day gift!!! I, personally, would not accept a Mother's Day gift from my employers or charges. I'm NOT a substitute mother. I love my little ones and care for them as my own but they are NOT MY CHILDREN. I think of a nanny as a governess, a tutor, a teacher, a baby nurse... not a fill-in mommy! |
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I have given my nanny a very nice chef's knife one year and then the next year I treated her to a deluxe spa mani/pedi (she was flying to Spain for her daughter's wedding and i thought some pampering plus having her nails professionally done would be one less thing to worry about when she arrived overseas). I don't do a card. I know it's mother's day, but it's a way for our family to thank her for all that she does. I also definitely feel that we are a 3-person team (DH, nanny and I tag team and raise our DC together).
For her birthday I have treated her, her mother who was visiting from overseas, and her adult daughter to high tea at the Ritz. I knew her mom is a huge tea drinker, so I thought they would particularly enjoy that. Last year, it was her 50th b-day, so we gave her $250 in cash. In my culture, it's very acceptable for people to give others gifts of appreciation, particularly when they are helping out w/ the kids. I don't view this as saying that my nanny is our DC's "mom." I don't that my nanny views it that way either. |
| I would consider it very odd if a family were to ever give me a Mother's Day card or present. I'm not the mother, I'm the nanny. |
Why do you find that shocking? Can you give me an example of a choice that a mom would make that wouldn't have at least an indirect effect on her kids? |
| The only thing I could imagine is if the nanny is an actual mother herself. Just as I call my sister or aunt and wish them a happy mothers day. But I agree that it is strange to use mothers day to specifically recognize your nanny. |