I'd like to offer an opposite experience. I found my children interpreted my lingering (even if it was just to talk to the teacher, who was a personal friend) as apprehension (on my part) over leaving them, and it seemed to increase their anxiety.
I don't advocate lingering either. The going away ritual doesn't have to be protracted. When I dropped Emmett off at pre-school it was get in the door, put his lunch in the cubby and head to the Dutch door goodbye.
The going-away ritual is best when it isn't "Mommy's going bye-bye now" but rather something like you walk Em over to an activity table and start a drawing or stack of blocks or something and reassure her that you're coming back later. Something like that. Eventually the process of going to the table will become reassuring and if you're consistent your child won't try to play the situation because it's just inevitable.
This would be awesome, but the teacher gets her from the front door and takes her back.
I didn't even stay that long when they were in their crying phase, Hec. I walked them in the door, kissed them, then said goodbye before they took off their coats. On days I failed to do that, the teacher said the crying lasted longer.
Well, I do concur that hanging around makes the separation worse.
Can anyone go to half.com and see if they can find a contact e-mail address to half.com? I'm about to strangle them. I've gotten 15 notification e-mails today about ONE sale. And, I can't find any way to contact them.
vw, there's a contact us link. I'm not a member, so it brings me to a page where I have to sign in, but maybe you'll have some luck with it: [link]
vw,
notification preferences: [link]
reporting spam: [link]
Hi all
I'm home right now becuse they needed someone to pull a weird shift, as the normal shiftees are unavailable.
Instead of my normal 9:30-7, I get to go in at 3:30 pm and stay at work until 1am. The last five hours? Alone at a helpdesk.
Yeesh.
Fake a thick accent, Daniel.