Anonymous wrote:Honest question, no snark intended: what would you prefer her response be instead of "I know."?
Same question to the second scenario. What are your expectations? What do you want her to say?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you should sit down and talk with her. "I feel like lately we're not quite on the same page. You seem annoyed when I tell you things or if I remind you about something. I also feel like you don't want to hear about things DS might do over the weekend or something. How are you feeling about the job? Do you feel like I'm nagging you? Would you like me to refrain from telling you weekend stories, etc...?"
Ask leading questions, listen hard, and see what you can learn.
Stupid advice because she will not feel that she can give honest answers. Why should she want to hear about what kid did on weekend unless it is something miraculous.
Anonymous wrote:Stop telling her about what happens on weekends. She doesn't care clearly. She's off duty then.
Anonymous wrote:Oy. That is no good. Are you being condescending? Ask DH to listen in on one of the exchanges, maybe he can tell you if you're provoking the nanny or if she's just being rude.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you should sit down and talk with her. "I feel like lately we're not quite on the same page. You seem annoyed when I tell you things or if I remind you about something. I also feel like you don't want to hear about things DS might do over the weekend or something. How are you feeling about the job? Do you feel like I'm nagging you? Would you like me to refrain from telling you weekend stories, etc...?"
Ask leading questions, listen hard, and see what you can learn.
Anonymous wrote:I am getting a lot of "I know" responses from our nanny lately. She is a wonderful nanny and has been with us for 18 months. I generally just tell her things as a reminder or just to double check on what she might be doing. Only lately have I been getting the "I know" responses. She also feels the need to lately to tell me "yes, he does that with me" every time I point out something cute or advanced DS did over the weekend when she never used to.
What gives? If I am doing something wrong to elicit these responses, I really do want to know.
TIA