Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:... when your child wants the nanny and not you?
No. nanny is busy, we are busy, kids are busy and we all work together. Nanny's job is to provide childcare and make our lives easier so we can do our day jobs to the best of our ability. If those two things aren't happening, bye bye nanny.
Kids under 2 yo change their minds on things constantly. Kids 2-4 may "like" whomever gives them the most candy and succumbs to their temper tantrums. And kids 5+ may have a "favorite" based on what they can get away with. End of the day OP may be asking a disciplinary question, depending on the kids ages, not a "child wants the nanny instead" weirdo question.
Actually, kids frequently gravitate to the person who is most consistent, regardless of whether that person is stricter or more lax. I never give candy, all food is healthy, temper tantrums and other misbehavior doesn't fly with me. Yet because I am more consistent than the parents, the kids cling to me for stability. That's natural, because my job is to provide that stability, and my DB understands that. MB gets a little irrational at times, but I understand why and cut her some slack.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:... when your child wants the nanny and not you?
No. nanny is busy, we are busy, kids are busy and we all work together. Nanny's job is to provide childcare and make our lives easier so we can do our day jobs to the best of our ability. If those two things aren't happening, bye bye nanny.
Kids under 2 yo change their minds on things constantly. Kids 2-4 may "like" whomever gives them the most candy and succumbs to their temper tantrums. And kids 5+ may have a "favorite" based on what they can get away with. End of the day OP may be asking a disciplinary question, depending on the kids ages, not a "child wants the nanny instead" weirdo question.
Actually, kids frequently gravitate to the person who is most consistent, regardless of whether that person is stricter or more lax. I never give candy, all food is healthy, temper tantrums and other misbehavior doesn't fly with me. Yet because I am more consistent than the parents, the kids cling to me for stability. That's natural, because my job is to provide that stability, and my DB understands that. MB gets a little irrational at times, but I understand why and cut her some slack.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:... when your child wants the nanny and not you?
No. nanny is busy, we are busy, kids are busy and we all work together. Nanny's job is to provide childcare and make our lives easier so we can do our day jobs to the best of our ability. If those two things aren't happening, bye bye nanny.
Kids under 2 yo change their minds on things constantly. Kids 2-4 may "like" whomever gives them the most candy and succumbs to their temper tantrums. And kids 5+ may have a "favorite" based on what they can get away with. End of the day OP may be asking a disciplinary question, depending on the kids ages, not a "child wants the nanny instead" weirdo question.
Anonymous wrote:... when your child wants the nanny and not you?
Anonymous wrote:No, because there is nothing to be jealous about and I'm not jealous or hurt by anything our nanny does.
It is developmentally appropriate, especially with young children, to "prefer" someone specific for a short time. Sometimes, only Daddy will do for snuggles or playtime. Sometimes, only Nanny will do. Sometimes, Mama.
All that means is that a child is learning to develop strong loving relationships with important people in her world. It doesn't mean she prefers nanny over mama in any permanent way. It's a phase.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It took me a long time to figure out that DC wanted whoever wasn't around. So she might cry for nanny, but cries just as much for me when I'm not there. So no, I'd never admit that.
How do you know she cries as much for you when you aren't there is you aren't there?