So! Henry’s babysitter hit him yesterday.
She. Hit. Henry. My son. Hit him! With her hand!
Before we place our hands on top of our heads and run around shrieking—and in doing so also perform an uncanny impersonation of my behavior yesterday—let me get this out, now that I’m calm enough to sit. While I’m telling you, try not to divine her identity using the power of your mind and then teleport yourself to her home and berate her for her wildly inappropriate behavior! Because I know that’s what you were planning!
Yesterday Henry arrived home with Trixie (my new name for her. Because she’s tricksy!) and announced. “Trixie hit me. She pushed me down and I scraped my knee.”
My heart stopped and I died. The end.
Then I came back to life and said, “Flalalalahhh?”
Trixie came in behind him, beaming. “We had an incident!” she declared, a huge smile on her face. “But we’re okay now!”
Here is her version of the events that occurred. She was talking to another babysitter when Henry demanded that they leave the park forthwith. She told him no, and continued talking to her friend. She was kneeling down next to Henry, and suddenly, BLAMMO! He walloped her in the cheek with his small (yet admittedly solid) Buzz Lightyear flashlight. And without thinking (“it was like a natural instinct,” she said many more times than I could stand without throttling her. It was my natural instinct!) she hit him right back.
“I couldn’t believe how hard he hit me,” she said. “I can already see the swelling. Look at that swelling!”
I could not see any swelling. I stared at her.
“I have only,” she said proudly, “hit another child like that in 30 years of watching children.”
Well! Only one other time! Bravo, madam!
Friends, she hit him such that he fell on his knee and scraped it. Now, will you please explain to me how, if he was facing her, and she struck back just as Buzz clattered to the ground, his knee was scraped? Shouldn’t he have fallen on his butt?
(And also? Last week he was running toward me, went flying, landed on both knees, and scraped them. And those scrapes were not as bad as this one.)
And if you’re struck in the face, would your first reaction be to hit the person who struck you? Wouldn’t it be to put your hands on your face? I’m sure it’s different for everyone, but for me, if something hits you that hard (“Look at that swelling!” Trixie is yelling from the sidelines) my first impulse would be to protect yourself. My second, when the pain kicks in, would be to respond in kind. Say, after the person has turned away.
I think he hit her and turned away. I think she was in pain, and had a big ol’ burst of rage, and she pushed him. This is what I think. I think she covered her ass as much as she could, given my son’s tendency to blab. Not that it matters, because either way, she’s not watching my son ever again. But this is how I like to torture myself.
(Dear people who might get uppity about my kid hitting someone else and why do I condone that: I absolutely do not. Never, ever, ever. But do you get that it’s different when an adult hits a kid? Are we clear?)
When she was telling me about the incident, she kept saying, “I don’t blame you if you fire me right now! Don't blame you at all!” and yet I couldn’t bring myself to do it. All I wanted was for her to be out of my house. Around fifteen minutes after she left I called her, and told her not to come back. “I absolutely agree,” she said. “I mean, I could get hit like that again!” She said this several times. “My husband says I should go to the doctor. He could have taken out my eye!” Then she wanted to know when she getting paid.
(Don’t get me started on the payment thing. Wait, too late! She would only agree to be paid in cash, and she kept insisting she was going to come to my home and get her money, and then after I told her I would let her know when and how she would get her money and hung up she called me every five minutes, screaming that I hung up on her and she is not a bad person and she only ever hit one other child ever! Apparently this “only one other kid” thing is an impressive track record! Finally my husband met her at a designated location and gave her her three days’ back pay. She was wearing a bandage on her face.)
The part that is causing me both guilt and also some degree of satisfaction is: I knew there was something off about her. She came highly recommended; she had an impressive background; she was full of ideas and enthusiasm and all that crap that we look for in a sitter. And yet, there was something about her that gave me the creeps. Usually this feeling took over when she wasn’t around, and I would think, I should tell her never to come back. I’ll call her right now. Wait, where’s her number? And then the next morning would roll around, and there she’d be, all smiles and chatter, and Henry would be excited, and I would think, Crazy Alice! She’s like Mary Poppins, only without the funny hat! And then they’d be off and I’d immediately begin my fretting and worrying and suspicion-having.
Just the day before, I had addressed another issue with her: Henry had, over the weekend, been telling me all about various commercials they had watched at Trixie’s house. When, hmm, I hadn’t known anything about them going to her house, not to mention watching television at her house. They clearly did this with some frequency—I mean, he recited the various uses of the Bedazzler to me, and then asked when we could get one. But then I asked her about it, and she had such a detailed story about this one time when they had to go there for an emergency and she forgot to call me, and on and on, and I left that conversation all confused and, well, bedazzled! Like she had covered me in shiny paillettes and made a throw pillow out of me!
There were other things, but anyway, it’s all over now. I was worried that Henry would miss her. I told him I was going to ask her never to come back. I wanted him to know that this was my decision. I didn’t want him to feel like he made her go away; I was sure he would have conflicting feelings about it. And he looked right at me and said, “Call her and tell her that now. Right now. And give me the phone when you’re done.”
UPDATE!: I just received word that Trixie called another parent, someone whose child she occasionally watches, and left a strange message. She said she had gone to the ER and had a serious injury. She added that Henry hit her because "Henry is allowed to hit," and therefore she had no choice but to retaliate. No choice! I'm not sure what she's up to, but it's not nothing, I'll tell you what.
ANOTHER UPDATE!: My attorney hath spoke: there's nothing she can do. I mean, she can try to sue, but nothing will come of it. So I will file this away under "Lessons Learned," and next time I'll be listening to my gut. Right now it's telling me I require a bucket of cookies. And I must obey.



In between freelance research jobs, I've worked as a full-time nanny to two lovely but mischevious children. I've definitely taken a fair amount of physical abuse, and I can say from experience that no matter how much a child hurts you, it's pretty easy to keep presence of mind and just tell them to stop. My six-year-old hit me over the head with her hard plastic lunchbox while I was tying her shoes. She held the lunchbox in two hands, swung it over her own head and then down onto mine--and I totally saw stars, but I never thought about retaliating with physical force.
That Trixie chick doesn't deserve the pleasure of Henry's company.
Posted by: C | June 21, 2006 at 09:23 PM
That is just downright wrong to hit a child back if they hit you. What kind of a person does that (well, aparently, this Trixie does.. she's done it before! a repeat offender!)? If she was any sort of a person, she wouldn't have done it in the first place. The part of this story that really makes me queasy? The part where Henry told you about going to Trixie's house. Emergency, my ass.
I hope she doesn't try to get any more money out of you, what with going to ER and all. A bandage! From a three year old! She probably did something mean to him to instigate that wallop.
Posted by: Elizabeth | June 21, 2006 at 09:28 PM
My first thought: OMG.
Immediate thought after that?: Document and call an attorney.
Good advice above on the police report. I'd also run a background check on her SS#, if you have it. And get a good attorney's counsel in case she's thinking of coming after you. Love the idea about asking for more info from the playground brigade as well. I'd keep any vmail messages as well for proof.
She's clearly unbalanced, and you should protect yourself.
Hugs for your and kisses for Henry.
Posted by: Pammer | June 21, 2006 at 09:43 PM
She is saying that he is allowed to hit therefore she is allowed to hit? And she is how old? And she has chosen caring for children as her career?
I think you should do some photographic documentation of your own. Whatever she is up to, if she doesn't just believe her own fantasies she is scary.
Posted by: far and away the farthest | June 21, 2006 at 09:45 PM
Oh, Alice, I'm really, really sorry about this. And I know, too, that you'd been nervous about leaving Henry in the first place, and I just want to reassure you as a nanny that THIS IS NOT HOW IT SHOULD BE, and there are those of us who know this, and who respect the privledge of loving and sharing your children and who HATE HATE HATE that women like this do crap like this and make all of us as a profession look like this. Good for you for not letting her near your child again and for sending Henry the message that it's not okay for him to be hurt by anyone, ever. He'll carry that with him.
Posted by: Lauren | June 21, 2006 at 09:51 PM
Oh, Alice, I'm really, really sorry about this. And I know, too, that you'd been nervous about leaving Henry in the first place, and I just want to reassure you as a nanny that THIS IS NOT HOW IT SHOULD BE, and there are those of us who know this, and who respect the privledge of loving and sharing your children and who HATE HATE HATE that women like this do crap like this and make all of us as a profession look like this. Good for you for not letting her near your child again and for sending Henry the message that it's not okay for him to be hurt by anyone, ever. He'll carry that with him.
Posted by: Lauren | June 21, 2006 at 09:51 PM
I am so glad you kicked that bitch to the curb.
Posted by: Shasta | June 21, 2006 at 10:06 PM
Oh. Wow. Run. Far, far, away. I reached for my 2 year old as I read this and held her tight, not wanting to know that someone could possibly hurt her. And there were more things? Thing she did to your little boy? Who is this madwoman?
I hope she fries.
Posted by: 2girlsmama | June 21, 2006 at 10:11 PM
Unbelievable. And i know just how you feel, about that 'off' feeling. We had a daycare situation that was similar -- i had a bad feeling, i went back and forth with it, i let my daughter go there, there was something 'off' that i just couldn't identify, the caregiver was highly recommended, i still had a bad feeling ... you know.
the thing that did it for me was when the wee one came home and said 'NO!' and slapped the back of her own legs. and when we dropped her off she'd scream no no no no ... the first couple days i thot it was just adjusting, but i've never felt as relieved as i did when i called and pulled the wee one out of that place. i still cringe whenever i drive near it.
i'm so sorry this happened, but i'm glad henry is ok and that you found out this early in it all. it's always a little scary to leave you little one with a carer, but a very good thing is that henry is old enough to tell you what's going on. kisses to both of you.
Posted by: kristin | June 21, 2006 at 10:11 PM
Delurking to say the following:
1. I'm sorry this happened, but at the same time, thank goodness it did before something WORSE happened to Henry or you. Something is seriously wrong with this woman. I have to agree with some of the other comments above...you might not have seen the last of her, unfortunately. It sounds to me like she is trying to cover her ass by going on the offensive.
2. Obviously it's not OK for Henry to hit anyone. But even if he DID hit this woman (and I'm not convinced of that), she committed battery against him. Her act is not privileged by self defense because (as the scrape on Henry's knee shows) she used more force than was necessary to defend herself. I would consider filing criminal charges and/or a civil claim...or at least preparing to do so in case she doesn't go away. Consulting an attorney would be an excellent idea.
Disclaimer: I'm an attorney, but not licensed in New Jersey, and obviously I don't have all the particulars of your situation, so don't rely on anything I've said as a substitute for actual legal advice.
3. Thank you for sharing this experience. More parents need to learn to trust their intuition when it comes to deciding who looks after their children.
4. It sounds like Henry will recover from this experience just fine -- indeed, probably has already.
Posted by: Jon | June 21, 2006 at 10:33 PM
Hmpf. Steam is pouring forth from my ears on your behalf. Email me if you want me to come sit on her or something (she might have a natural instict to sit on me then, but ha! she won't be able to since I'm still sitting on her... ummm... anyways).
The whole "natural instinct" crap and her excuses (=lies?) about TV sound like she's 13 years old - but apparently she isn't.
Congratulations on having a blabby, smart, wonderful boy. Who cares if he hits mean people?! ;)
Posted by: European | June 21, 2006 at 10:50 PM
Good riddance. Good job getting rid of her. Good for Henry for sticking up for himself.
Posted by: White | June 21, 2006 at 10:59 PM
Okay, hi, I've never commented here before, but reading this makes me insane. While I don't have Trixie's impressive "30 years of watching children!" I do have a solid 10 years of babysitting and nannying under my belt, even just at the age of 23. I have dealt with many an angry child. I've had kids scream at me, and I've had kids take swings at me. It has never been my "natural instinct" to hit a kid back. EVER! Anyone whose natural instinct is to shove a little boy, under any circumstances whatsoever, shouldn't be around kids! Under any circumstances whatsoever! Go away, crazy lady, and never come back.
Trust YOUR "natural instincts" with babysitters. I've taken care of a lot of children, and I have had some really wonderful relationships with families. I've watched kids grow from 5 year olds to 8th graders. I've also gone for babysitting interviews in which the family has never called me back. For whatever reason, those families didn't feel like I was right for them. And that's okay, because if it doesn't feel right for the family, then it's not right.
Okay, I hope I didn't come across as condescending, because you obviously know everything I just said. But as someone who loves kids, who can't wait to have kids of her own, and who takes her job of taking care of kids very, very seriously...man, am I pissed at Trixie!
Posted by: Melody | June 21, 2006 at 11:00 PM
You are so in the right here. I've been a nanny for years (though not 30), and have NEVER hit a child, and lemme tell you I've been hit PLENTY of times. They are CHILDREN. I do not know why I am YELLING because we are in AGREEMENT. A little girl bit me recently and my first reaction was to, y'know, get her teeth out my arm, but I just pulled away and had us be apart for a little bit. I hated having to tell her dad, but I had a really massive bruise from her so it was sort of unavoidalble. As a sitter it is our job to be in control of not only the child but ourselves. I am UPSET at this Trixie. Garrgh!
Posted by: Emily | June 21, 2006 at 11:04 PM
I am so sorry this happened. I was a nanny for years, often for children who could be quite difficult at times (I had a shoe thrown at my head once and was told that it was my job to pick it up, by a three year old!). I NEVER hit or felt the urge to hit a child. I hope you find someone who works out for you. Maybe another mom would be better?
Sounds like you handled the situation very well. It seems like she is trying to cover her ass in case you press charges. Good luck. Henry is a very bright boy, what a great job he did telling you what happened!
Posted by: Katie | June 21, 2006 at 11:04 PM
You should have pushed her down, you know, just to see if she falls on her knees or her butt.
She sounds like a coward and a bully. Bravo for getting rid of her.
Posted by: Mary | June 21, 2006 at 11:08 PM
This post was very interesting to read. What drama! Since no one else has done so (or admitted to it at least) I will be the first to confess that I have reacted impulsively to a hit from my own child with a tap back - not my best parenting moment by any means, but I didn't harm my child and did nothing more than shock her. HOWEVER, I am not defending Trixie, because I would think that if she did truly react "with natural instinct" she would also then realize how stupid that instinct was and APOLOGIZE PROFUSELY after the fact (not try to defend herself!) to both you and Henry. But it appears to go beyond the incident if more is bubbling, or bedazzling its way to the surface. And here I thought you were such a weirdo for spying on them at the park!
Posted by: A | June 21, 2006 at 11:20 PM
Oh my.
Oh my oh my oh my.
I think you are sooooooo right that this is not the end of the story. I can see this getting ugly. I hope it doesn't get ugly. Well.. I hope it gets ugly FOR HER however.
And I am feeling guilty that I am now awaiting any forthcoming details with eagerness! Call the paparazzi! The public needs to know of any new episodes, toute-de-suite!
Posted by: amy | June 21, 2006 at 11:27 PM
Ok, I'm not a nanny and by no means have 30+ years of experience doing anything whatsoever, but I WAS a teenager who babysat 3 boys who where seriously devil children when their parents walked out the door. One of them threw a severe temper tantrum ABOUT NOTHING WHAT SO EVER and while I dealt with the screaming and the wailing of arms upstairs, the noise (of the boy yanking on the door I was holding) scared the boys downstairs to such a degree that the oldest one told his parents that I SPANKED his brother, which NEVER happened (I did indeed eat all the mini Reeses cups, but spanking isn't quite my cup of tea!). Although my charge was not physically injured in any way (visually), I phased out of the career and have mostly stayed away from children since.
All that to say--remember she's still a kid herself. The mom of the kid I baby sat was really cool and sat me down to calmly explain what their policy for discipline was so I would know what to do next time rather than act in frustration. Looking back I really appreciated her patience and maturity with me. I'm sure it was something she was forced to learn.
Posted by: Heather | June 21, 2006 at 11:32 PM
Wait... she's married? Nevermind -- fire her ass.
Posted by: Heather M | June 21, 2006 at 11:35 PM
You're right about the first instinct (particularly a hard wallop) is to go 'Ow, that really hurt.' That's what I do if my son gets me. You're also right in that she must have really shoved him. Sounds so pre-meditated! It's good she's gone.
Posted by: jen | June 21, 2006 at 11:40 PM
I agree with the people who say be careful and document everything (that bandage on her cheek makes me very nervous). The thing that bothers me most (well, not most I guess but a lot) is that she took him to her apartment and he was there long enough to watch a bedazzler commercial and remember details of it (those are infomercials, right? and other commercials too?) and did not mention it? Until she got caught? And then she said once, but it was more than once? (What about the other things she has said only! happened! once!)
Alice, I am so sorry. Good for you and Henry for sticking up for yourselves.
Posted by: meg | June 21, 2006 at 11:43 PM
One more thing to add.
It seems atypical of Henry to hit someone just because they said they weren't ready to leave yet. And obviously because of the "Let me talk to her when you're done" aspect of firing her shows that he didn't like her. It makes me wonder how she was treating him in other ways. Ways that are not as obvious as being HIT, but still are just as detrimental to his well being.
I hope you're still feeling good about camp that's coming up! At least at a center, there are more people around and a lot more accountability. My son, unfortunately, has been a hitter (and kicker, thankfully, never a biter) and we've worked very hard with rewarding the good choices and punishing the bad ones, and have been lucky that the center he goes to has worked with us during the rough patches (instead of just flat-out kicking him out). He's doing much better now. I've totally felt the urge to smack my child. Who doesn't feel the "instinct" (who are we kidding, it's a WANT, lady! You WANT to hit him back, it's not instinct!) - but that is why we are adults! Because we can stay in control of our passions and not give in to them. I admit, I have spanked, and have been sorry about it ever since. Even spanking is different than hitting a child ( and you're right, it sounds more like he got pushed/shoved) (not that I have any excuse) spanking denotes a punishment, and hitting is just abuse!
Anyway. Good thing you've shown her the door!!
Posted by: amy | June 21, 2006 at 11:52 PM
I'm sorry but I would like to defend Trixie on one point. I often have BeDazzling emergencies. Often. Practically hourly. Someone somewhere comes home from the mall realizing that their denim is WITHOUT RHINESTONES!! Their Keds have no oomph, no pizzaz. What is a person to do? Just let them walk around like that? So, I do what any red blooded American Bedazzler would do, I stop what I am doing and gemmify! And if I happen to be babysitting, I bring the kiddos along. I consider it passing on my craft to future generations.
Posted by: Em | June 21, 2006 at 11:54 PM
Down with Trixie! Off with her head!
Stories like this scare the crap out of me. I have yet to leave Audrey with anyone but our parents. Kudos to you for taking it so calmly.
Posted by: angela | June 21, 2006 at 11:58 PM
I would say... make sure you have the number for a good attorney handy. Truly. The police report is a good idea too.
And I would also say... sit down RIGHT NOW and write out those weird incidents as you remember them, and as Henry has told them to you -- inappropriate TV watching at her house and all.
And if Henry can remember anyone else from the park, someone you could possibly call and ask about what they saw, do it.
I'm really not paranoid or trying to alarm you. But as a manager, the best defense against that kind of behavior is to be prepared. Document what you can, stay calm, and if you're ever accused of anything (or hit up for cash) you'll be ready.
I've hired some people who seemed perfectly OK but who were really bad employees, and I've learned the hard way to trust my gut. And keep good records. It's a hard lesson to learn, but necessary.
Good luck, and I hope the two of you are ok.
Posted by: Heather | June 22, 2006 at 12:01 AM
my response would have been, you're damn lucky i didn't hit you. and by the way, you better go into a witness protection program because you will be turned in to the proper authorities for child abuse.....
now, give me back my money...
Posted by: gorillabuns | June 22, 2006 at 12:35 AM
Oh my GOD. That woman is outrageous. On what planet is it OK to run around hitting children? No. No no no no no.
Good for you for cutting her loose, and good for Henry for being such a good little man about it.
I don't know you from Adam and I want to find her and beat her down. Man. Hit your kid! Not OK!
Posted by: Brooke | June 22, 2006 at 12:38 AM
If you haven't already (and if someone hasn't already mentioned this -- too pissed to read the comments first), you should take a picture of Henry's knee in case the crazy babysitter tries to make this incident bigger than it already is. Protect yourself. Document everything. She sounds loony. I didn't like her from the start, when you said she marched in and announced her own agenda instead of taking instruction from you. And WTF is up with her taking Henry to her house?? That is a definite no-no. Document, document, document. (Oh, and hugs to you and Henry!)
Posted by: Beth | June 22, 2006 at 12:52 AM
did henry get in trouble for hitting her? when i was a kid, if i hit someone, there were consequences. I'm not saying that it makes it right to hit back, I'm just wondering if you said anything to him about it....
I hope everyone doesn't dump on me now.
Posted by: Mags | June 22, 2006 at 01:03 AM
That's terrible. I had an awful babysitter once when I was a kid - she would steal all my marbles and climb on our roof and then when I told on her, she attacked me like "You told on me didn't you, you little bitch?" But she never hit me. I can't believe the "only hit one other kid" defence...
Posted by: Jem | June 22, 2006 at 01:07 AM
Delurking to reiterate advice already given: document, document, document. Go to the park see if you can get names and numbers (and what their perception of the “incident” was/is). Also, at least get a name of an attorney licensed to practice in New Jersey, you can go to New Jersey’s Bar Association website for referrals: http://www.njsba.com/lawyer_referral/ . (Yes, attorney and so probably much too suspicious and cynical, but better safe than sorry; also this is not legal advice, you need to consult an attorney for legal advice.) I don’t want to freak you out any more than you already are (with excellent cause, Trixie is beyond words horrid) but…
Take care of yourself, Henry and your husband.
Posted by: JK | June 22, 2006 at 01:20 AM
this is my first time commenting. i just wanted to say that this horrifies me. if your responsibility is to babysit a child, then it's your responsibility to be at least somewhat receptive to said child, even if he or she would like to do something you don't want to do. such as leaving a park. i used to be a nanny. the little girl i watched used to hit me all the time, because she had a bad temper, and more than once bit me or hit me in the face. it certainly never crossed my mind to hit her back. it's not human nature to hit back. not in my opinion anyway. i would understand if, maybe, a huge dude was clobbering you in the face with buzz lightyear. but a little boy? i guess she's a babyhitter?
Posted by: annie | June 22, 2006 at 01:33 AM
She's only hit another child once?
Yeah. The word "only" and the phrase "hit a child" can only co-exist with the word "never".
As in, "I've only hit a child never." Any amount of times above never times completely obliterates the only.
Otherwise, you've got a total oxymoron going on there.
So sorry that happened. I agree with the other commenters that recommend consulting with an attorney, just in case.
And I'm going to vibe the shit out of Miss Whackjob Fisticuffs all the way from across the country, here. Jesus.
Posted by: Tina | June 22, 2006 at 01:33 AM
I hit my son a few times out of anger when he was younger and I still feel bad about it. I'm emotional and physical and generally this is good but it does have a downside. This is why I do not earn my living watching children. And this is, I think, what's at the heart of the Trixie story: You may need to fix your own car from time to time, but if you do not know how to fix a car, you should not be a mechanic, offering to fix the cars of others in exchange for their money. If you cannot restrain your anger at a child, you should not care for the children of others. There is more than a damaged engine at stake.
Posted by: tuckova | June 22, 2006 at 02:33 AM
I had the very same thing happen to me when I was a teenager babysitting neighborhood kids. A little 4 year old girl who I absolutely adored socked me in the face really good, and even as a 14 year old, I had the sense to deal with her appropriately. I know children can wear on your nerves and make you crazy at times, but there's really no excuse for hitting a child out of anger, ESPECIALLY when you can't say, "Wow. I was way out of line and totally wrong and am so very, very, VERY sorry." I can't believe this Trixie woman tried to rationalize it! Good for you for giving her the heave-ho! None of you need that crap.
Not that you want to be vindictive, but perhaps you should file a report with child welfare? I'd want to know if someone I left my children with had only hit one - oh wait, TWO - other children, particularly if it was enough to leave a visible injury. This woman should not be caring for anyone else's children.
Posted by: shannon | June 22, 2006 at 03:29 AM
Ok, so she only hit another child once right? What happened, did the others just move too fast for her?
I really feel for you, finding decent childcare is like finding rocking horse shit and then you feel constant guilt about leaving them.
This Tricksy dog was an exception to the rule, you will find your own Supernanny and you will never look back.
Hugs to you both.
Posted by: Brightflowermaid | June 22, 2006 at 04:18 AM
First, I'm sooo sorry that your family has been through this. It's awful to imagine (over and over, if you're like me) anyone doing ANYTHING to your baby, when you aren't there to step between them first. That doesn't make it your fault *at all* - you've been making good decisions through all of this, and sometimes, you just can't know something will go wrong until it already did.
The other thing is, you said that this woman's version was that Henry wanted to leave, she was talking to the sitter, etc. Have you also asked Henry why he did it? This is a woman who is crazy / cunning enough to show up later with a bandaged face, badmouth you to other parents, etc. I'm wondering *cringe* if anything else might have provoked Henry? She's a bad, dishonest person, so I don't automatically her story is true.
Just something I was thinking about, to distract myself from wanting to drive over from Pennsylvania RIGHT NOW and throttle this woman.
Posted by: ~t.~ | June 22, 2006 at 06:39 AM
Whoa. This is sickening but not, sadly, that unusual. The best thing here is a lesson learned. Trust your gut. As women we sometimes are afraid of not being "nice" when someone engenders that icky feeling in us. We have to learn to get over that; it can save us from a lot of bad things. By the way, I have taught children and adults with autism for the last 20 something years so I have been hit, kicked, bitten, even had a TV thrown at me. Last week, in a 3 hour period, a child hit me 37 times. In the face. "No hitting." A time out and a sad face on his chart. Done.
Posted by: Denise | June 22, 2006 at 06:53 AM
That is so insane. Not just the hitting but her trying to justify herself. I'm so sorry it happened. At least now she won't be around Henry anymore. Hitting children is illegal here in Scandinavia, but maybe it isn't in the U.S.? One of my first thoughts was "lawsuit", too, when I read about her bandaged cheek (as a foreigner I tend to freak out about American lawsuits, the outcome seems so random and unfair sometimes), but in Norway I think you would stand a pretty good chance with a claim against her (which doesn't help you at all though). The bottom line is, there is no excuse for an adult to hit a child. Ever.
Posted by: anja | June 22, 2006 at 07:14 AM
Um, yeah, I think you ought to track the other sitter down, hire an attorney, and call the police and/or CPS. Something's fishy. And take copious photographs of Henry's knee. I don't like the way this sounds at all.
I understand that in a moment anyone--and I do mean ANYONE--can snap. Which is maybe what happened (and I'm not defending it) and maybe this chick is just afraid to admit that she lost it when she was hit in the face.
Posted by: wix | June 22, 2006 at 07:15 AM
That's the pits...and from 8 years on the playgrounds of NYC, I suspect it happens in post-playground on carpeted surfaces more than anyone cares to think about - I've seen a couple of babysitters and mothers whose stress level drapes around them like a mantle til their faces get that "Don't Defy Me" look. And if she's been at it for 30 years and you've only been at it for a few, well, she reckons she's got it all figured out, hence her call to the other mother. Sounds like this is going to be a helluva way to meet some other folks w/ young children in your new community! (And in 5 or 10 years you and your close friends can trot it out for homesick new arrivals from Brooklyn. By then, it will be merely a source of grim comedy and Henry will be outside by himself skateboarding or if it's 10 years we're talking about, loitering near his former playground with his girlfriend. But even then I guarantee that at story's end, the listener will gasp and say, So what happened to Trixie?
Posted by: ayun | June 22, 2006 at 07:27 AM
I'd guess if she admits to hitting once before, you can bet it's more than that. If she bothers you in the future, report her anonymously to the IRS. Since she gets paid in cash, they can probably keep her busy for a while sorting out her taxes...
Posted by: Ellen | June 22, 2006 at 07:47 AM
Hi - I'm a lurker from Brooklyn, and Brooklyn misses you. Lordy, I am so sorry that this has happened, but glad you're maintaining a sense of humor about it. And Henry seems pretty resilient, so I don't think he will turn into an ax-murdered suddenly. Aagin, sorry. But don't let this sour you on babysitters forever. Just Trixie. So long to Trixie! Forever.
Posted by: robin | June 22, 2006 at 07:57 AM
Iy sounds to me like she had someone else hit her so that she would have something to show (or sigh sue) about? if I was uber paranoid and insane that thought would cross my mind.
if it seems like she is trying to build up some kind legal garbage, you could always threaten to 1099 her for every cent she made from you ( more or less threatening to take 30% of her pay back from her point of view.)
That's awful Alice. I hope you can just get your chin up and move on. There is one thing that you can be happy about, though. In all my life everytime I've managed to get rid of someone who made my intuitive crazy person spider sense go off it has made a huge and amazing poisitive impact. All best.
Posted by: robbm | June 22, 2006 at 08:00 AM
I am so sorry this happened to you and your little boy! There is nothing scarier than trusting someone with your baby and then they go and do exactly what you hired them to protect your kid from. You handled it beautifully. I've occasionally met people whom I trusted when they were in my presence and, the minute they left, started having doubts about. I've learned not to question it any more - they are always bad news, in my experience. Thankfully, your little guy is okay, and your mommy instincts are sharper than ever.
And all that bitch's whining about being hit - did she not know that kids sometimes hit? Or bite? Or scratch?
Good thing you made this post. I'd photographs his scraped knee, that woman sounds like trouble and you should have this whole thing documented.
Posted by: jennifer | June 22, 2006 at 08:06 AM
Yes. If someone hits me my instinct is to hit back. In my Muay Thai kickboxing class.
Silly babysitter. So sorry for Henry.
Posted by: Working From Home Today | June 22, 2006 at 08:09 AM
I am shocked and saddened by your post today...Is she a licensed childcare provider? If so, you NEED to report this incident to the board to go on her record, (If NJ is set up that way) also a police report. Even in self defense it is NOT allowable to hit a child. Especially as one as young as Henry. Also, I know you want to probably forget this whole thing, but a police report should be obtained. Just in case, whether you pursue (or she does) civil action or not... Also, in our state after 600 dollars you can 1099 them for their services, because, you know, you did pay her and she needs to report those monies on her tax return. Your intuition kicked in and you waved it off...Please, Please help the other mothers who are also waving off their icky feeling of her, because of her cunning behavior. Just by her actions of calling other parents shows that she is defensive which shows that she guilty. Hugs to you today.. For that sick pit in your stomach!
Posted by: Judi | June 22, 2006 at 08:14 AM
I would have fired her too. I suggest (I haven't read previous comments, so this might have already been said) that you take pictures of Henry's injuries, just in case. She sounds slightly vindictive and crazy, so you might want to cover yourself by having those pictures. Good for Henry for not being shy about telling you when things like that happen!
Posted by: Jessie | June 22, 2006 at 08:32 AM
Maybe she has been childminding for a hundred years, but it sounds like she's beginning to lose the plot. She sounds tweaked.
I just know she didn't have that bandage on before she went to collect her money. Don't you?
I hope that by phoning around other mothers to tell them about the incident, she'll be setting off alarmn bells in their heads about HER, not about YOU: if any of them shared your gut instinct that she's a creep, they'll be asking her not to come back to their houses either.
Well done Alice. Good on you. Hope the bad feeling goes away soon.
Posted by: Antonia | June 22, 2006 at 08:46 AM