My daughter’s nursery teacher was obsessed with her so I got her fired – people say I’m wrong but she creeped me out
A MUM who got a nursery worker claimed she felt compelled to complain based on “mother’s instinct”.
The woman’s eight-month-old daughter goes into nursery four days a week – but she discovered that one specific worker had a “hyper fixation” on her tot.
The mum was unnerved to learn that the nursery worker regularly cuddled her daughter and, according to her colleagues, was possessive over which other staff members could hold her.
The mum even saw the worker kissing her daughter’s face – a sight which “creeped her out”.
She took to an online forum to detail the issue, penning: “I was picking up my daughter a few weeks ago and the teacher wasn’t there.
“I was speaking to another worker in the room and asked her who my daughter’s favourite was.
“She told me it was the [teacher] and that my baby is her favourite and ‘her baby’, and no one else can hold her.
“What sent me over the edge was when I was picking up my daughter last week and she was asleep on the worker’s lap when I walked in.
“As she handed her to me, she kissed my daughter on the forehead and said she was gonna miss her so much.”
The mum continued that even though her daughter was smiling and happy, she was “disgusted” by the worker.
She explained: “I didn’t care about her until one day when I was speaking to the director, I could see her holding my daughter and kissing all over her face.
“Yes, my daughter was smiling and looked happy, but I was disgusted.
“I just felt it was too far.
“I brought it up to the director and she turned around shocked and said she would talk to the worker.”
The complaint has since transpired into the childcare worker losing her job.
The mum was pleased with the outcome, but found her satisfaction has been met with disagreement by people in her life.
Her sister-in-law is said to have become “upset” by the events and believed the childcare worker may have been acting innocently.
As she had worked in a daycare during her university years, she acknowledged it is “normal to have a favourite” baby at work.
The annoyed mum said: “She said I overreacted, and I shouldn’t have complained about something so dumb.
“And that I should be grateful that someone really loves my daughter.”