Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give it time kids go through phases one week its mom who can't leave, then dad, and nanny it can last awhile or be only a few days long. You could ask nanny to start getting your son ready for you to come home about 15 minutes or so before you arrive and if there is a window they can watch for you to come home, wave to him from the car and have nanny explain you're home and he's going to play and have fun.
I lost my job because my charges one in particular was so attached to me I was with them 40-60 hours a week from age 2 months-2.5 years. He would run down the hall every morning and say nanny is home, nanny is home when mb left he didn't even notice even though we stood at the window to wave he wasn't interes in doing that when she came home same thing he didn't care and he would cry when I would leave and mb said it took him 30 minutes to calm down. I did everything possible to get him excited for mb but nothing worked and she couldn't take it they ended up going to day care and she texted saying how happy she was when they cried when she was leaving and then how happy they were when she picked them up
Wow. Talk about incredibly selfish parents. That's so heart-wrenching.
Anonymous wrote:Give it time kids go through phases one week its mom who can't leave, then dad, and nanny it can last awhile or be only a few days long. You could ask nanny to start getting your son ready for you to come home about 15 minutes or so before you arrive and if there is a window they can watch for you to come home, wave to him from the car and have nanny explain you're home and he's going to play and have fun.
I lost my job because my charges one in particular was so attached to me I was with them 40-60 hours a week from age 2 months-2.5 years. He would run down the hall every morning and say nanny is home, nanny is home when mb left he didn't even notice even though we stood at the window to wave he wasn't interes in doing that when she came home same thing he didn't care and he would cry when I would leave and mb said it took him 30 minutes to calm down. I did everything possible to get him excited for mb but nothing worked and she couldn't take it they ended up going to day care and she texted saying how happy she was when they cried when she was leaving and then how happy they were when she picked them up
Anonymous wrote:...but never when DH and I leave in the morning. He is 17 months. He waved good-bye happily to us when we leave in the morning but begins to react to the nanny leaving as soon as he sees either DH or I come home.
I'm not insecure and I understand he is tired in the evenings. I just was hoping to hear suggestions on how to make the transition easier for him in the evenings. The nanny leaves happily and tells him in a happy tone that she will will see him tomorrow and makes her exit fast. She pretty much does what DH and I do in the morning but a bit faster.
Anonymous wrote:I've had this issue. The parents decided it was to traumatic for the children to see them so they changed my end time and decided to only come home once the children were asleep. Worked out a lot better. But very long days for me.
nannydebsays wrote:OP, i don't know how long this nanny has been working for you, but if she is relatively new, your little one is likely saving his strong emotional reactions for you, since he knows intuitively that you will support him through his upset.
Often, a new(er) nanny doesn't get the gift of kids melting down completely because they are not trusted adults yet. Kids know who is an emotional safe haven, and eventually nanny will likely join those ranks, but for now his parents are the safest adults your child has.
Doesn't mean there is anything wrong with nanny, just means kids know who they can trust 1000% of the time.