Hidden Nanny Camera Saves Lindsay Addison’s Children
Lindsay Addison invested in a hidden nanny camera to see her children while she was hard at work. Never suspecting her hired nanny, Addison merely missed her kids and thought she would enjoy getting to see them via the web using her hidden nanny camera.
After an intensive search online for a nanny, she found someone with experience and extensive references. The nanny she hired even had her own child that she brought to work with her. Who better to watch your children than a fellow mother? This was the thinking behind Addison's researched decision to hire her new nanny for her new twin boys, Gavin and Bryce.
Knowing her boys were safe at home, Addison returned to work and back to life. Missing her time with her children was hard for her, but she had put them in trusting hands. Or so she thought.
Addison wanted to see her children, but thought maybe that her nanny wasn't doing the things around the house that she had asked of her. The last thing Addison expected to see was her nanny mistreating the children. Addison describes the horrible images she saw in an interview with WRAL, a CBS affiliate for Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill and Fayetteville, North Carolina, "She would just grab them by where their shirt or where their buttons or zippers are, and pick them up like bales of hay or puppies or kittens, with no care how she was doing it, and sling them on the sofa."
In watching more of the video, Addison was shocked. Addison describes to WRAL, a particularly hard to watch scene, "She was, at one point, holding Bryce up on her chest, but was too concerned with what was on the television and changing the channel. When he fell off her chest, she didn't pick him up right away," Addison said. "And then, she went and held him upside down, which, to me, is just not how you should hold a baby."
Addison's story had to be told. Mothers everywhere should know that the easy to use technology of nanny cams can create a system of surveillance in your home when you're not there. As much as it would be nice to trust a nanny with your children without question, it's just plain scary. With spy cams you can take the fear out of this scenario. If parents can afford to hire a nanny, they most likely can afford the technology to check up on their nanny as well. With prices dropping, and technology so simple and easy to use, take Addison's advice and invest in these hidden nanny cams. She was lucky enough to find this technology in time, but what if she hadn't?
Parents won't always find that their nanny is harming their child, but they'll be able to reassure themselves with actual proof that the nanny is safe for their child.
(Information about Addison's story was available through WRAL's website and the link to her story can be found at http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/2465417/)
After an intensive search online for a nanny, she found someone with experience and extensive references. The nanny she hired even had her own child that she brought to work with her. Who better to watch your children than a fellow mother? This was the thinking behind Addison's researched decision to hire her new nanny for her new twin boys, Gavin and Bryce.
Knowing her boys were safe at home, Addison returned to work and back to life. Missing her time with her children was hard for her, but she had put them in trusting hands. Or so she thought.
Addison wanted to see her children, but thought maybe that her nanny wasn't doing the things around the house that she had asked of her. The last thing Addison expected to see was her nanny mistreating the children. Addison describes the horrible images she saw in an interview with WRAL, a CBS affiliate for Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill and Fayetteville, North Carolina, "She would just grab them by where their shirt or where their buttons or zippers are, and pick them up like bales of hay or puppies or kittens, with no care how she was doing it, and sling them on the sofa."
In watching more of the video, Addison was shocked. Addison describes to WRAL, a particularly hard to watch scene, "She was, at one point, holding Bryce up on her chest, but was too concerned with what was on the television and changing the channel. When he fell off her chest, she didn't pick him up right away," Addison said. "And then, she went and held him upside down, which, to me, is just not how you should hold a baby."
Addison's story had to be told. Mothers everywhere should know that the easy to use technology of nanny cams can create a system of surveillance in your home when you're not there. As much as it would be nice to trust a nanny with your children without question, it's just plain scary. With spy cams you can take the fear out of this scenario. If parents can afford to hire a nanny, they most likely can afford the technology to check up on their nanny as well. With prices dropping, and technology so simple and easy to use, take Addison's advice and invest in these hidden nanny cams. She was lucky enough to find this technology in time, but what if she hadn't?
Parents won't always find that their nanny is harming their child, but they'll be able to reassure themselves with actual proof that the nanny is safe for their child.
(Information about Addison's story was available through WRAL's website and the link to her story can be found at http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/2465417/)
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