Anonymous wrote:I let my nanny drive my kids all over - but we live in the burbs and they are in private school and activities are all over nova.
That said, I would be effing furious about this and I would be doing a lot more than wondering - I'd put a GPS tracker on my kid - they sell GPS tracking watches on amazon. Or, I'd text her this Friday at 3:30 PM - I'd say I am heading home where are you and DD? I miss her so much I am going to come meet you - and see what she says. I have always been very particular about my nanny running personal errands on my time - a bank drop off here or there sure - going home to meet the plumber with my kid - no. I have had the same nanny for 7 years (3 kids later) and I trust her with my life and my kids lives and I still check up on occasion - my kids can talk obviously so easier to know what goes on, but still. . .these are my kids! Im curious, using your own example, if your Nanny needs to be at her house to wait for a plumber you would rather she took that day off than let her take your kidto her house for a few hours? Because my MB would rather i take her kid with me that her miss a,day of work. This is nothing like what the OPs nanny is doing.
Anonymous wrote:This is all so cray. A normal errand you can run at work is stopping by a bank or getting stamps. Normal stuff that takes a couple minutes. Not driving kids way out of the way. Crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nanny here and I am seriously blown away that people are hiring nannies that they are pretty sure LIE TO THE PARENTS on a regular basis. Seriously, WTF. ?
I’m blown away that nannies take these positions and feel like they have to lie. I would never take a position where the rules were so uptight about where and how far away you could go.
Anonymous wrote:Nanny here and I am seriously blown away that people are hiring nannies that they are pretty sure LIE TO THE PARENTS on a regular basis. Seriously, WTF. ?
Anonymous wrote:Nanny here and I am seriously blown away that people are hiring nannies that they are pretty sure LIE TO THE PARENTS on a regular basis. Seriously, WTF. ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Small GPS tracker in her diaper bag?
I would do that but she’s not in diapers anymore and usually the nanny just puts what they need in her own bag
Are you really agreeing that this is a good idea?? BEFORE you have a simple direct conversation with the person that you've entrusted with the care of your child! The nanny is wrong to go against your specific directives but this is not the way to handle that issue.
Op here. That’s the thing-I’ve tried talking to her. I’ve tried to understand her schedule and needs with her own kids and come up with a solution (e.g.-maybe she needs to leave early on Fridays). But when I do this, all of the sudden her answers and timeframes stop making sense and her statements become inconsistent. So I’m left always feeling unsure of what’s really going on. I suspect she is afraid/worried about making me change my schedule to accommodate her, and she doesn’t see the big deal with taking my DD on a 2.5-3 hour drive every week if DD is napping.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think you are overly restrictive IF you are indeed close to all these things. Because t I do like more freedom in my positions (freedom to find fun activities for the kids). But that is beside the point. Personally, I would NOT talk to
Her about this. I would find out! Come home early on Friday and simply text and ask what they are up to, and then go there! If you suspect she’s lying, she likely is. And if she is, she’ll definitely lie when you ask her. I would do my best to catch her, not have a conversation that allows her to lie to me more and possibly change her routine as to not get caught!
Anonymous wrote:One of our 5 simple rules is the kid is not to be more than 5 or so miles away, and that is the nearest shopping mall. Preschool, Gymboree, 6 playgrounds, friends are all about 2 miles one-way.
Reiterate this rule of the house for her. It is too risky to be driving a 2 yo all over the place, or back to her house, or to pick up her teenager miles away. That's BS. She should do her errands and social stuff on her own time.
Leave a list of house rules. go through them with her Monday morning. End by saying this is all very important to you and your family.