Anonymous wrote:1) Have the smack-down conversation with grandmas: “Nanny is very important to DD right now. We love that DD feels so loved and safe with her primary caregiver. But nanny will only be around until Kindergarten (or whenever). You will be grandma forever and trying to compete with nanny for this short time is only going to make DD anxious.”
2) Find a way to make grandma time special—as a nanny, I have a lot to do during the day and I don’t read as many books as my charges would like (B3 would gladly read for 2 hours straight). They love when granny visits because she has no other tasks and is happy to just read and read and read. Another grandparent likes to cook and does fun cooking projects whenever they visit. Look for something that can bond them.
3) Give it time. The older they get, the less they rely on their primary attachment figure to be their home base.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to smack down the grandmothers.
I have had to do this also and it can be hard but I won't have the nanny's happiness, relationship with my kids, or overall stability and wonderful reliability jeapordized by grandparents who overstep.
OP here. I agree with you. I am just too chicken to do it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to smack down the grandmothers.
I have had to do this also and it can be hard but I won't have the nanny's happiness, relationship with my kids, or overall stability and wonderful reliability jeapordized by grandparents who overstep.
OP here. I agree with you. I am just too chicken to do it!
Anonymous wrote:You need to smack down the grandmothers.
I have had to do this also and it can be hard but I won't have the nanny's happiness, relationship with my kids, or overall stability and wonderful reliability jeapordized by grandparents who overstep.
Anonymous wrote:Put MIL on a schedule for her visits. Every Monday and Friday mornings, or whatever. Can nanny go out and get herself a coffee during this time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Set a schedule with the grandparents and let your nanny have a few hours paid break when the grandparents are visiting. That will give the grandparents your child’s full attention and take your nanny out of a situation that is likely awkward and stressful for her.
Ha, we had the same solution at the same time!
Anonymous wrote:Put MIL on a schedule for her visits. Every Monday and Friday mornings, or whatever. Can nanny go out and get herself a coffee during this time?
Anonymous wrote:Set a schedule with the grandparents and let your nanny have a few hours paid break when the grandparents are visiting. That will give the grandparents your child’s full attention and take your nanny out of a situation that is likely awkward and stressful for her.
Anonymous wrote:sounds like you have a great nanny. both grandmothers should be happy.
is this a live-in nanny or do the grandmothers pop in to your house a lot?
if either of them are making comments like this, they need to grow up. anyone spending 25-50 hours a week with a child is going to have a closer relationship.