imsorry
<font color=green>Eating an entire pint of Ben & J
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2005
- Messages
- 10,341
I am the manager - i.e. the boss, for my division. Occasionally, I bring my children to work with me; they behave, I don't expect anyone else to supervise them for me and...well...I'm the boss. One of my employees brought her son to work with her, on a day when I was not there. She did not ask me first, but I wasn't upset about that - he is 13, so I would most likely have said "yes" anyway. However, the other people working that day complained about him, that he was loud, obnoxious, disruptive.
I didn't say anything to her at the time (a mistake, I see now) because I thought it would be a one time deal. Well, she brought him again, on a day when I was there, and they weren't kidding. He is noisy and constantl getting in everyone's way, and he ended up tripping one of our alarms by accident. I was very annoyed and told him to stop touching everything...he just couldn't be still.
His mother confessed to me that he has ADD - okay I am sympathetic to that, but that is not my problem. Well, then he was horsing around and ending up breaking something that a customer had purchased. After that I just said "you can't bring him anymore, period." She is angry because "you bring your kids all the time."
Well that's true, but my children haven't broken anything. And I'm the boss, and too bad, the boss gets to do things employees don't get to do.
Some of my staff suggested that making a general rule "no children at work" would be the least offensive way to handle it. I guess I'm being stubborn, but I don't see why I should be inconvenienced because someone else's child cannot behave, regardless of the reason they cannot behave.
Your thoughts?
Ummmm, so let me get this straight, you're the boss?
That did occur to me. I really do think I am harder on both myself and my kids than other people though. 
