How To Deal With Childcare Worker Envy

Woman with a worried expression, representing childcare worker envy and parental challenges.

The relationship between a mother, a childcare worker, and a child is a complicated one, and not something we talk about as much as perhaps we need to.

For one, it’s a paradox. Mums want their children to feel safe and to trust the childcare workers that take care of them while mums are at work. At the same time, those mothers don’t want their children to grow too attached to the childcare workers, lest they threaten to emotionally replace them.

The phenomenon is one we at SAHM have come to call ‘Childcare Worker Envy’. It’s increasingly common among mums who have chosen, for one reason or another, to go back to work either on a full or part time basis. So how do mums deal with that envy, so that their children aren’t caught in the middle of a nasty war for affection?

1. Know There’s Much You Don’t See

Mums often feel jealous of childcare workers based on the evidence immediately in front of them. Their children may no longer cry when dropped off at childcare. Instead, they run into the arms of their favourite childcare worker, forgetting mum by the door. When time�comes for them to go home, kids sometimes cry and whinge�to be separated from their carers. But childcare workers tell a different story. They know that when kids are in care, much of what they talk about are their mums, the biggest influence in their lives. They pretend to call their mums, pretend to be their mums, and want their mums when they’re hurting. Mum is number one, even if that isn’t always clear.

2. Remember Clan Childcare

woman-with-daughter-talking-to-teacherIn the early days of human history, children were raised by the entire clan. While mum had a big part to play, so too did the other women of the group, and even the older children. Now, our families are much more nuclear in their makeup, but that doesn’t mean that ‘clan childcare’ should be forgotten. Those childcare workers that we rely on to take care of our children while we work are merely secondary carers, not intended to replace mum’s care, but merely to supplement it when she isn’t available.

Next Page: More Ways on�How To Deal With Childcare Worker Envy

author avatar
Clare Whitfield Chief Editor
Clare Whitfield is the Editor of Stay at Home Mum and a recognised voice in practical home management for Australian families. Based in the northern suburbs of Sydney, she balances editorial leadership with life as a stay at home mum to two school age children. Her background in home economics and more than a decade of experience in recipe development, family budgeting, and household systems inform her work.

Discover more from Stay at Home Mum

Subscribe to get the latest posts to your email

Recent comments

Discover more from Stay at Home Mum

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading