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Discuss everything related to paid childcare here, including childminders, nannies, nurseries and au pairs.

Should I let me nanny go?

39 replies

nordiclondonmum · 05/01/2025 08:22

So as the title suggests, I would love some input on my current situation.

A bit of backstory: I have two kids, aged 10 months and just turned 2. I was lucky enough to have my sister-in-law helping me, but as the workload increased and with my return to work approaching, we decided to hire a nanny. It took a while, but we finally found someone, and she started at the beginning of December.

So far, things have been okay. I’ve noticed that my 2-year-old hasn’t fully warmed up to her, but I understand that this might just be her age, and I wanted to give it more time. There are also a few areas where we differ (discipline, for example), but I felt that with clear communication and time, we could work through those differences. The nanny does have many great qualities—she speaks my native language, manages well with both kids, and is generally attentive.

However, an incident on Friday has left me unsure about how to move forward. The nanny decided to take my 10-month-old to visit a friend, who is also a nanny, at a soft play center about an hour’s drive from our house. While we’ve agreed she can take the kids on outings, we live in central London, where there are plenty of baby classes and activities nearby.

That morning, I was out for a while, and when I returned, I checked the monitor to see if my son was napping. The nanny was in his room trying to settle him, but she was doing so quite forcefully. He was clearly distressed and didn’t seem sleepy. She continued to push him down into the cot—at one point even pressing his head—while telling him to go to sleep. She also said, “I haven’t had a moment for myself today.”

Eventually, she left him in the cot to cry and walked out. I don’t believe in the cry-it-out method, so after a few minutes, I went to get him. When the nanny came back, I asked if he had napped. She explained that he had fallen asleep in the car and that they then had napped together in the bed when they got home, but when she tried to transfer him to the cot, he wouldn’t settle, hence he had had enough sleep.

I brought this up with her that evening, and she was very apologetic, assuring me it wouldn’t happen again. However, I’m still struggling with the situation. I’m worried about going back to work, but it also took me so long to find someone I felt was a good fit. Should I trust her and continue to monitor, or is this a red flag I can’t ignore?

Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

OP posts:
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LivingLaVidaBabyShower · 05/01/2025 08:25

Erm... thats a no from me.

And I'm pretty relaxed about standards of childcare.

The question you need to ask is " can you close the front door and totally forget about the babies kniwing they are in good hands with someone who cares for them?"
Answer here is a big fat no.

harrietm87 · 05/01/2025 08:27

I think I would let someone go over this. It would be an absolute no from me, due to the pushing him down in his cot.

I also wouldn’t be happy about leaving him to cry and the long drive, but my reaction would depend on how clear I’d been in advance about what I did and didn’t want.

The nanny needs to (1) ensure the kids are safe at all times (2) follow instructions imo. Stuff like whether they speak a language is less important.

90yomakeuproom · 05/01/2025 08:27

A definite no, sorry

HooverIsAlwaysBroken · 05/01/2025 08:33

I wouldn’t be happy with this due to the pressing on the head and the comment “I haven’t had a moment to myself today”. Newsflash, when you are looking after children, it is very difficult to get a moment to yourself. If you want that, you need to plan very carefully - and an hour in the car just before naptime is not the way to go at all. And this was an outing she chose.

I would let her go - but to discuss with a lawyer / HR person. I believe that NannyTax may be able to help with that, or any company you are using to pay tax and NI. You don’t want to get a claim for unfair dismissal.

PokerFriedDips · 05/01/2025 08:34

Using a nanny is only viable if you can trust them 100%.

You can't.

So this isn't viable.

IdgieThreadgoodeIsMyHeroine · 05/01/2025 08:35

Good god, get rid of this woman immediately.

BigMingeEnergy · 05/01/2025 08:46

It would also be a no from me.

calmandcollected101 · 05/01/2025 08:47

Definitely not!

Let her go!

That's awful! So basically it's about her what she wants and having time to herself

FreedomofGroovement · 05/01/2025 08:55

Also a no from me. How/where did you find her? Did you speak to referees?

2021mumma · 05/01/2025 08:55

She has to go

partygarden · 05/01/2025 09:13

I'll be honest, I started reading expecting you to say something fairly minor, shocked when I read the full post!

Absolutely get rid. She's taken on the role knowing the ages of your children, she should be qualified to settle a fussy (I assume on this afternoon) baby. The forcing the head down and making that claim under her breath is v concerning.

Honestly, I know how frustrating young children are (I have an 18 month old and 6 year old who had the.worst.colic in the world, literally 24/7 for about 6 months). I get it, it's bloody hard some days. But! You learn what works, you adapt to fussy behaviour. Our nursery is great, I can't imagine any of the staff there talking to my youngest like that, it must have been quite confronting to see.

You need someone who is calm, experienced and most of all, has a sense of humour about it all on difficult days.

She's not a good fit. Don't chance it (is my advice), get someone who you can trust 100% without having to check everything they're doing. What happens the next time she's overwhelmed? You can't be worrying about her being with your children.

republicofjam · 05/01/2025 09:16

I can not stress this enough, please do not leave your child with this woman.

Judgejudysno1fan · 05/01/2025 09:16

She has to go.
So unacceptable and awful.

What does your husband think?

LandedGentTree · 05/01/2025 09:18

I disagree with previous posters - I think yes, let her go.

jannier · 05/01/2025 10:31

Lots of issues for me
You don't spend an hour in the car to go somewhere that is around an hour's play then drive an hour back.
You don't expect a baby to nap after napping on an hour's car ride.
You don't push a child down and hold them forcefully....gradual withdrawal is a gentle hand so she wasn't doing that.
Why was she laying with him in bed? Do you want her to do that?
You can't trust her so look at other options.

converseandjeans · 05/01/2025 11:35

It sounds like she drove an hour to suit herself & so she could catch up with her friend. It’s obvious that a baby will then fall asleep in the car. He'd then had sufficient sleep & wasn't tired.

I wouldn't be keen on the bed sharing either. I've read stories about people rolling onto a baby. I know it's popular on here to co-sleep but it's not for me. I wouldn't expect a nanny to bed share - why not just put him in his cot?

Also I wouldn't really expect a young nanny to go for a full on nap in bed after a morning out! I think she's overstepped a bit - does she have her own room?

I would use a childminder or nursery if you're finding it hard to get a nanny.

If she is so stressed after a morning with the baby then how will she cope with the toddler too?

2025hello · 05/01/2025 11:48

Or you could look after your own children a bit more?

AusMumhere · 05/01/2025 11:52

2025hello · 05/01/2025 11:48

Or you could look after your own children a bit more?

That's a bit harsh

cannynotsay · 05/01/2025 11:56

She pushed your child down, and you think she's a good fit?

2025hello · 05/01/2025 12:38

@AusMumhere

Perhaps the nanny is run ragged. Sounds like the Op could've stayed in and been involved rather than popping out.

Always more to these situations.

caramelcappucino · 05/01/2025 12:43

This a deeply concerning red flag that I urge you to not ignore. That is abuse! You are paying a nanny to care for your children not to damage and abuse them, you should have told her to leave the moment you saw how aggressive she was being with your small baby! Why is this even up for debate?

caramac04 · 05/01/2025 12:48

I wouldn’t be able to trust her. Frankly the trip out was hardly the most onerous of mornings so nanny didn’t need a nap whilst on duty and shouldn’t have expected baby to need more sleep.’
Her settling method is deeply concerning.

OurDreamLife · 05/01/2025 12:52

I wouldnt mind her visiting another soft play but pushing his head and being annoyed at him is a massive red flag or warning sign to me. I would have probably told her to leave the same day.

What will it escalate to when she’s stressed with both little ones?

thestudio · 05/01/2025 13:39

OP, which part did you bring up with her - the fact that he'd just had a car ride (her choice as long as you're ok with that but obviously he won't sleep after that) or the use of force (maybe violence?) on a baby? If it was the latter, how did she excuse herself?

And how can you 'discipline' a ten month old?

Either way I think she has to go.

jannier · 05/01/2025 13:48

2025hello · 05/01/2025 11:48

Or you could look after your own children a bit more?

Wtf