Anonymous wrote:All children are terrors for their parents and wonderful for other people.
It has nothing to do with the nanny.
I was a SAHM for many years. I know this as a fact.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can try. Remember none of the things nanny does is rocket science, it's not a position that requires brilliance or a PhD, only time and patience. Nanny is being paid to be with your DC, so she has no issue with spending an hour tricking your child into eating but do you? Do you want to spend an hour of time and constant attention to get your child to eat? Do you want to do those over blown reactions? My assumption since you came here to post about instead of just incorporating the things you witnessed into your own life and routine means you see that it's an annoying investment.
A lot of "nanny tricks" are fairly obvious. As long as you are willing to invest the time and change some habits you can get your child to behave, or try new things, or do almost anything you want.
that's so condesending. some of the posts on here unbelievably rude.
Oh sorry, I should have wrote nannying requires intense skill and years of training. OP don't even attempt to use those advanced psychological nanny tricks on your child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can try. Remember none of the things nanny does is rocket science, it's not a position that requires brilliance or a PhD, only time and patience. Nanny is being paid to be with your DC, so she has no issue with spending an hour tricking your child into eating but do you? Do you want to spend an hour of time and constant attention to get your child to eat? Do you want to do those over blown reactions? My assumption since you came here to post about instead of just incorporating the things you witnessed into your own life and routine means you see that it's an annoying investment.
A lot of "nanny tricks" are fairly obvious. As long as you are willing to invest the time and change some habits you can get your child to behave, or try new things, or do almost anything you want.
that's so condesending. some of the posts on here unbelievably rude.
Anonymous wrote:You can try. Remember none of the things nanny does is rocket science, it's not a position that requires brilliance or a PhD, only time and patience. Nanny is being paid to be with your DC, so she has no issue with spending an hour tricking your child into eating but do you? Do you want to spend an hour of time and constant attention to get your child to eat? Do you want to do those over blown reactions? My assumption since you came here to post about instead of just incorporating the things you witnessed into your own life and routine means you see that it's an annoying investment.
A lot of "nanny tricks" are fairly obvious. As long as you are willing to invest the time and change some habits you can get your child to behave, or try new things, or do almost anything you want.
Anonymous wrote:All children are terrors for their parents and wonderful for other people.
It has nothing to do with the nanny.
I was a SAHM for many years. I know this as a fact.
Anonymous wrote:I've posted about this before.
My niece was terrified of elevators when she was four. We live on the 8th floor so taking the stairs when they came to visit was exhausting. My sister and BIL would try to talk my niece into getting into the elevator, explaining how safe it was and telling her how they understood her feelings but...
One day, when our nanny agreed to take my niece and baby to the park, she just told my niece, "Oh stop - you're being silly. Get in the elevator." And my niece did! Seems we were encouraging her irrational fear by talking about it!!
Sometimes we forget when we hire an experienced nanny that we may be first time parents but this is not the nanny's "first time at the rodeo"!
Anonymous wrote:My charge behaves the same way. What I notice is that her parents spend so little time with her comparatively, that during the time they do have together, the parents don't want to bring it down by being too focussed on discipline. They give in to things that I never would, in order to prevent meltdowns. The result is a child who has adapted to 2 sets of expectations, and I rarely deal with meltdowns but they are constantly on the verge of one. The parents try to make it about how "good" I am with her, but really, I'm just consistent.