Anonymous wrote:
In the second instance, the mother was bitter and jealous. She made my life hell with all of her fault-finding and nit-picking. Finally, I quit. I know those kids were so sweet but had a parade of caregivers in and out of their house for their entire childhoods b/c their mother couldn't reconcile her own jealousy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My nanny brings crap into my house...in the guise of it being 'for my kids'...not kidding, she does it all.the.time.
I just think she is trying to foist her trash onto me.
Your kid is three...(so are mine, by the way)...when your dd isn't paying attention (napping? sleeping?)...put it in the trash.
No drama, no explanation, no crap that you don't want.
Done!
Funny you say that because when my child was sleeping, I placed it in the attic. (I would have put it in the trash but I don't want my nanny to come across it and have her feelings hurt. Lol.)
Anonymous wrote:I am a nanny and I don't really think that the OP is being unreasonable. I have a wonderful relationship with my MB and DB and we never have problems. My MB is very anal and particular about certain things but I know how she is so I do things to her liking. I don't bring things into their house without first consulting them (even things like crayons, play-doh, etc.) and I would never bring something used over because I know she wouldn't feel comfortable with her child using things that have been used by someone else. I am sure to clean to mess that I make during the day and I usually leave everything else.
When I first started working my MB had a few small complaints and she let me know right away instead of letting each little thing slide. How is your nanny supposed to correct her behavior if you don't let her know when something bothers you? Make it clear that you want to be the one to make decisions in your child's life, especially first anything. The first time they try foods or an activity, let her know that you want to know about it BEFORE she mentions it to the child.
When you correct her or bring up a behavior be sure to let her know that it isn't personal and that you are just very particular. Let the nanny know that the things that you mention are nonnegotiable. If she is unable to follow your requests then let her go.
Anonymous wrote:I am a ftm MB and am as laid back as they come so your style is definitely not mine. But having said that, what you want from your nanny is not bizarre, it just seems that you two may be a poor match for one another. I have to imagine that there are people out there who are willing to do exactly what it is that you want (no housecleaning, pick up toys, no foods or toys without permission, etc). Bottom line is that it is your right to run your household how you see fit, so make it happen!
Anonymous wrote:And then she'll wonder why all the emotional issues the kids have when they are grown up.
Yep, bonding problems, especially in the early foundational years, have significant consequences down the road, FYI.
nannydebsays wrote:OP, do you really bring in enough money by working that it's worth feeling frustrated and resentful so much of the time?
I'm sure you (and your DH/SO) have gone over your budget to see just how much you bring in net (after paying nanny, driving, parking, work clothes, eating out, paying taxes, etc.) and to see if you could live without that money. Right?
It would just stink to feel so upset if you don't HAVE to work, as in, can't pay the mortgage without your income.