Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP needs to put her child’s needs before her own in this case. The nanny doesn’t need to be the mother’s favorite person.
Why isn’t this selfish mother just grateful that her child is so well cared for?
I agree completely. OP needs to put her child’s wellbeing above her own comfort. It’s about the kid - not the mother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She sounds lovely, but we don’t all enjoy each other. This is such an intimate relationship and should likely continue for several years to come. Move on sooner than later!
FYI, the “intimate” relationship is between the child and the person he spends the most time with, not between the parents and the caregiver. How many times would you willfully break up your child’s intimate relationship with his primary caregiver?
As a career nanny that generally works with WFH parents, I stand behind my statement. I think it is imperative for the nanny and parents to have a strong working relationship.
Sure, but how many times would you toss a nanny that you just don’t personally like? Shouldn’t the child’s needs be paramount?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She sounds lovely, but we don’t all enjoy each other. This is such an intimate relationship and should likely continue for several years to come. Move on sooner than later!
FYI, the “intimate” relationship is between the child and the person he spends the most time with, not between the parents and the caregiver. How many times would you willfully break up your child’s intimate relationship with his primary caregiver?
As a career nanny that generally works with WFH parents, I stand behind my statement. I think it is imperative for the nanny and parents to have a strong working relationship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She sounds lovely, but we don’t all enjoy each other. This is such an intimate relationship and should likely continue for several years to come. Move on sooner than later!
FYI, the “intimate” relationship is between the child and the person he spends the most time with, not between the parents and the caregiver. How many times would you willfully break up your child’s intimate relationship with his primary caregiver?
Anonymous wrote:She sounds lovely, but we don’t all enjoy each other. This is such an intimate relationship and should likely continue for several years to come. Move on sooner than later!
Anonymous wrote:You can. But I suspect that the nanny's confidence is part of the reason that she shows so much initiative, is so engaged, etc. Will you be happy with a nanny who doesn't do those things? If you end up with a nanny who doesn't plan things unless you direct her to and who needs a lot more hand-holding, will you feel frustrated?
In my office, there are certainly people who are a bit know-it-all. But we wouldn't treat that as a firing offense unless their performance was inadequate. It doesn't sound like that's a problem with your nanny. If it's just personality, but she's trustworthy, responsible, smart, engaged, and motivated, I'd probably just put up with it. No one's perfect, and you might not be happy with the tradeoffs.
Anonymous wrote:OP here:
I don’t care that she’s educated.
We wanted someone who is.
What I don’t like is her insecure *need to correct*
everything attitude.
I get that she’s smart, but smart doesn’t have to mean annoying.
I guess I’m not the type to correct people when they say something misinformed and I found it odd she doesn’t waste time trying to show you why you’re wrong?..
Not to say she hasn’t been wrong, I just didn’t go out of my way to point it out