Anonymous wrote:Most nannies are lazy but THINK they are great because they take their charge for a walk or to the playground here or there. I'm not a parent but I get it and hopefully the nannies who actually have kids get it as well. The ones who don't are deluded.
Anonymous wrote:NP/MB here. I think my problem with this thread is that you can't extrapolate from the other horrible thread that YOUR MB who wants you to play with the children feels anything like the awful mothers who posted in the other thread.
I love playing with my children as I think many parents do. Sitting on the floor with them while they smile and laugh while we play together is truly my greatest joy. I also encourage them to play independently because I think it's important for them to learn that but it's not because I don't enjoy it.
The original thread is awful and I can see why nannies would be frustrated by it but not every MB who has a nanny feels like those parents do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do these women not remember their childhoods? I just have a hard time believing many of the MBs we deal with had caregivers ( who in reality were probably their grandmothers, neighbors, or daycare providers) who sat on the floor all day and "played" with them.
My charges are 3 and 1. We play, but 80% of their day they play with each other, themselves, or other kids. They are the smartest, most well behaved children I know.
I remember my childhood (MB here). It involved going all over the city with my nanny. Eating dinner while my mother got dressed to go out. My nannies absolutely DID play with me on a regular basis. No cell phones then unless you were a drug dealer, just beepers by the time I was aging out of needing a nanny.
Can I ask a question of the PP who went out with her nanny all the time- I'm just curious and don't have many people to ask. I'm a WOH parent and I admit I do have mommy guilt sometimes. How did your upbringing affect your relationship with your mother? I realize there are a lot of factors involved but it sounds from your post that you spent a lot of time with your nanny and I wonder what kind of relationship adults who spent a lot of time in daycare or with nannies had and currently have with their parents. Just curious.
I have zero relationship with my mother and that's been the case since I was 16, but it has nothing to do with having a nanny. I didn't have a nanny because my mother was oh so busy working but had tons of mom-guilt about it and thus tried to make all our time together special. I had a nanny because my mother didn't want to parent, so she didn't. The reason our relationship died has nothing to do with the nanny.
To better answer your question I'll bring in DH - he and his sister had a nanny growing up while both their parents worked full time. Each parent aimed to take a half day off from work once a week to spend an afternoon with one of the kids. Weekends were all about the kids. They had a baby nanny and after that, another one all through their childhoods. Both DH and his sister are very close with their parents. They talk on the phone as a family every Sunday, and separately multiple times throughout the week. There are big family vacations, their mom flies out to help with the grandbabies every other month or so. So, it CAN work out well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do these women not remember their childhoods? I just have a hard time believing many of the MBs we deal with had caregivers ( who in reality were probably their grandmothers, neighbors, or daycare providers) who sat on the floor all day and "played" with them.
My charges are 3 and 1. We play, but 80% of their day they play with each other, themselves, or other kids. They are the smartest, most well behaved children I know.
I remember my childhood (MB here). It involved going all over the city with my nanny. Eating dinner while my mother got dressed to go out. My nannies absolutely DID play with me on a regular basis. No cell phones then unless you were a drug dealer, just beepers by the time I was aging out of needing a nanny.
Can I ask a question of the PP who went out with her nanny all the time- I'm just curious and don't have many people to ask. I'm a WOH parent and I admit I do have mommy guilt sometimes. How did your upbringing affect your relationship with your mother? I realize there are a lot of factors involved but it sounds from your post that you spent a lot of time with your nanny and I wonder what kind of relationship adults who spent a lot of time in daycare or with nannies had and currently have with their parents. Just curious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I already posted but I do want to offer the perspective that some peope are horrible cleaners, but when they hire someone to clean they expect it to be done properly. Some people are bad with numbers, but expect their accountants to be able to get their taxes done. Get it? This is your job, your specialty. That is why you are expected to do things that some moms have admitted they cannot do.
You cannot play with your own children? Surely you realize how incompetent this makes you sound...
Cannot and don't like to are VERY different concepts.
Anonymous wrote:I already posted but I do want to offer the perspective that some peope are horrible cleaners, but when they hire someone to clean they expect it to be done properly. Some people are bad with numbers, but expect their accountants to be able to get their taxes done. Get it? This is your job, your specialty. That is why you are expected to do things that some moms have admitted they cannot do.
Anonymous wrote:I already posted but I do want to offer the perspective that some peope are horrible cleaners, but when they hire someone to clean they expect it to be done properly. Some people are bad with numbers, but expect their accountants to be able to get their taxes done. Get it? This is your job, your specialty. That is why you are expected to do things that some moms have admitted they cannot do.
Anonymous wrote:I already posted but I do want to offer the perspective that some peope are horrible cleaners, but when they hire someone to clean they expect it to be done properly. Some people are bad with numbers, but expect their accountants to be able to get their taxes done. Get it? This is your job, your specialty. That is why you are expected to do things that some moms have admitted they cannot do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do these women not remember their childhoods? I just have a hard time believing many of the MBs we deal with had caregivers ( who in reality were probably their grandmothers, neighbors, or daycare providers) who sat on the floor all day and "played" with them.
My charges are 3 and 1. We play, but 80% of their day they play with each other, themselves, or other kids. They are the smartest, most well behaved children I know.
I remember my childhood (MB here). It involved going all over the city with my nanny. Eating dinner while my mother got dressed to go out. My nannies absolutely DID play with me on a regular basis. No cell phones then unless you were a drug dealer, just beepers by the time I was aging out of needing a nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Do these women not remember their childhoods? I just have a hard time believing many of the MBs we deal with had caregivers ( who in reality were probably their grandmothers, neighbors, or daycare providers) who sat on the floor all day and "played" with them.
My charges are 3 and 1. We play, but 80% of their day they play with each other, themselves, or other kids. They are the smartest, most well behaved children I know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of this is really insulting to me. I'm a mother, w/ twins and a nanny and a pretty demanding job that our family needs me to keep (and that I enjoy BTW).
I will be thrilled when our kids are old enough to play independently and well, and I encourage my nanny to support that.
I enjoy my children immensely. I also find them exhausting. Our nanny makes our life possible and we are blessed to have her. We make her life possible also.
I don't fit your judgments above and I'm sure the majority of mothers here don't either. Just as I'm sure the vast majority of nannies are far more rational, loving, and professional that many of the viewpoints routinely expressed here.
Mom here. I agree, but you should read the other thread and you will see where these nannies are coming from. I get that children's play can be really repetitive, but that thread was just sad.