Anonymous wrote:You guys are paid help. That is how it will always be.
You are not a parent. You don't have right to stay in touch as far I see it.
You finish a JOB and you move on. You aren't family and you shouldn't be expected to be treated like it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thanks!Anonymous wrote:Go spend some time working in the child services world. You will be astonished at the dominance of parents in a child's life. No matter how awful the abuse a child wants a parent.
Which is not at all what's being discussed here, or in 99% of nannying circumstances, but decent parents trump the worlds best nanny in a childs' view. Maybe not in the middle of a three year old tantrum - sure, but when a child wants comfort and permanence they look to a parent.
Sorry. Have your own kids if that's what you're looking for. If you're a sane, loving caregiver then I will welcome you into my family and be thrilled you love my child. But you are still being paid to do a job. Period.
You actually can't buy real love. If your child has a nanny who loves him/her, count your blessings and treat her like gold.
That's what smart parents do.
Of course. I wouldn't hire someone who I didn't think would grow to love my child. But I don't expect anyone to do it for free and I don't expect (or want) a nanny to feel the same way about my kids as she would about her own.
Sounds like a very right what you wrote . I hope they respond to your ad .like they're quite now I didn't see them responding .those specific parent you should read these add to freshen up your brain . That I didn't see either respond I can feel the regrades what they have. Thanks!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've formed bonds with all my charges but with appropriate boundaries. I rarely have contact with my former charges, mostly because they've moved on to different phases in their lives. I love my current charges but one day this job will end like all the others. I will miss them, of course, but they're not my children so I don't feel grieving is necessary. No one died. I'm a great nanny but I'm also a mother and my child is who I give my unconditional love to, much like these parents whom you say don't understand. I feel some nannies form unhealthy attachments and the parents see that. These kids aren't yours...so move on. Not trying to be snarky...just being straightforward.
Some parents feel blessed when they find a nanny who treats her charge "as her own." I guess you wouldn't be that sort of nanny.
There is room for all kinds of nannies out there. If nannies treated children as their own, some of them wouldn't be as effective. Sometimes it's easier to discipline, tutor and set boundaries for a non-parent and you get better cooperation from the child.
The best parents and the best nannies are the ones who have the ability to best meet the real needs of the individual child before them.
Anonymous wrote:Go spend some time working in the child services world. You will be astonished at the dominance of parents in a child's life. No matter how awful the abuse a child wants a parent.
Which is not at all what's being discussed here, or in 99% of nannying circumstances, but decent parents trump the worlds best nanny in a childs' view. Maybe not in the middle of a three year old tantrum - sure, but when a child wants comfort and permanence they look to a parent.
Sorry. Have your own kids if that's what you're looking for. If you're a sane, loving caregiver then I will welcome you into my family and be thrilled you love my child. But you are still being paid to do a job. Period.