Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've formed bonds with all my charges but with appropriate boundaries. I rarely have contact with my former charges, mostly because they've moved on to different phases in their lives. I love my current charges but one day this job will end like all the others. I will miss them, of course, but they're not my children so I don't feel grieving is necessary. No one died. I'm a great nanny but I'm also a mother and my child is who I give my unconditional love to, much like these parents whom you say don't understand. I feel some nannies form unhealthy attachments and the parents see that. These kids aren't yours...so move on. Not trying to be snarky...just being straightforward.
Some parents feel blessed when they find a nanny who treats her charge "as her own." I guess you wouldn't be that sort of nanny.
There is room for all kinds of nannies out there. If nannies treated children as their own, some of them wouldn't be as effective. Sometimes it's easier to discipline, tutor and set boundaries for a non-parent and you get better cooperation from the child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've formed bonds with all my charges but with appropriate boundaries. I rarely have contact with my former charges, mostly because they've moved on to different phases in their lives. I love my current charges but one day this job will end like all the others. I will miss them, of course, but they're not my children so I don't feel grieving is necessary. No one died. I'm a great nanny but I'm also a mother and my child is who I give my unconditional love to, much like these parents whom you say don't understand. I feel some nannies form unhealthy attachments and the parents see that. These kids aren't yours...so move on. Not trying to be snarky...just being straightforward.
Some parents feel blessed when they find a nanny who treats her charge "as her own." I guess you wouldn't be that sort of nanny.
Anonymous wrote:" I attended a wedding a few years ago. The nanny who stayed with the family for years stood next to the two parents (by then long divorced) for the marriage of the girl they had all raised. "
^ this.
My nanny is at times a better parent than me or my husband. Especially with discipline. I am secure enough to not only admit this but value it. I first looked at hiring a nanny as I would my work place. Find someone better than me to do the things I couldn't. That model has made my business thrive and you know what its also made my home thrive.
It takes a village to raise a child is the motto my grandparents and parents had. And my village is my immediate family and our nanny who has become family. Not by blood but by tears shed for my child's first heart break, by the joy of my sons first steps, by the dedication to the adults my children will become.
We love our nanny just as much if not more than she loves our kids. And WE would grieve when that day comes to say goodbye. She is someone we would want to stand by us at our kids weddings, honored at bar mitzvahs, and remembered through photos and stories.
By the way- the quote is from a remarkable article
http://mobile.nytimes.com/2012/07/15/magazine/nannies-love-money-and-other-peoples-children.html?_r=0&referer=https://www.google.com/
Anonymous wrote:I've formed bonds with all my charges but with appropriate boundaries. I rarely have contact with my former charges, mostly because they've moved on to different phases in their lives. I love my current charges but one day this job will end like all the others. I will miss them, of course, but they're not my children so I don't feel grieving is necessary. No one died. I'm a great nanny but I'm also a mother and my child is who I give my unconditional love to, much like these parents whom you say don't understand. I feel some nannies form unhealthy attachments and the parents see that. These kids aren't yours...so move on. Not trying to be snarky...just being straightforward.
Anonymous wrote:I've formed bonds with all my charges but with appropriate boundaries. I rarely have contact with my former charges, mostly because they've moved on to different phases in their lives. I love my current charges but one day this job will end like all the others. I will miss them, of course, but they're not my children so I don't feel grieving is necessary. No one died. I'm a great nanny but I'm also a mother and my child is who I give my unconditional love to, much like these parents whom you say don't understand. I feel some nannies form unhealthy attachments and the parents see that. These kids aren't yours...so move on. Not trying to be snarky...just being straightforward.
Anonymous wrote:I'm afraid 9:57 sounds a bit as if she's in denial/defensive mode.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most parents do understand. However most parents do not post comments online.
If you are a parent who understands, what do you do to maintain some sort of continued relationship between an "attached" former nanny and your child? How long did the nanny care for your child?
Kudos to you for your sensitivity to this, and thank you for sharing your thoughts.
Anonymous wrote:Most parents do understand. However most parents do not post comments online.