Yes: If you live in the city, your maid or cook or babysitter can come first thing in the morning and/or leave after dinner. My friend-of-a-friend centimillionaire has a couple who are caretakers of his Eastern Shore house, so they live in a cottage on the grounds. |
NP. One of my favorite books of all time! |
The Reiners did have a guest house. It's where their drug addicted mentally ill son lived. Ugh. |
This is standard for regular employees. Subcontractors get let in by regular employees. But there are cameras on everything. Even for a normal sized house, it wouldn't be abnormal to have 10 people show up on a regular day for various tasks. The owner most certainly doesn't want to be dealing with that. |
Have some empathy. UGH |
That and they all too often take advantage of their employers. Steal from them, use credit cards inappropriately, betray confidences, etc. There’s low level of trust on both sides. |
| Maybe women don’t want to end up like Maria Shriver. Betrayed by the staff and her husband in her own bed right under her nose. |
| labor laws and minimum wage are too strict now adays, once we get ai robots that will come back then eventually the liberals will want to give the robots right and we will repeat the same cycle |
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Good points in the thread but one factor no one has mentioned is that technology greatly changed the nature of housework in the mid 20th century. Dishwashers, washing machines and later dryers, microwaves, packaged foods that were easier to prepare, in-home HVAC instead of fires or other methods for heating and cooling a home -- all of this diminished the work that household staff had to do, making it harder to occupy household staff enough to justify having them live in.
Of course the wealthy still have housekeepers, nannies, landscapers, and personal assistants. But when your housekeeper can start the dishwasher before she leaves and get the laundry done in 3 hours instead of 10, it makes less sense to have her living in. You also don't need people lighting fires at 5am just to make a home livable in the winter, or a team of people spending 3 hours preparing a meal from scratch. Culture also became much more casual which mean fewer formal meals to prepare and clean up after. Instead of a small wardrobe of formal clothes that needed to be spot cleaned and continually repaired and updated, people have larger wardrobes of more casual clothes that can be machine washed and don't need to be re-embroidered or beaded or otherwise tended to. Even if you are a billionaire, you simply do not need a steward or lady's maid to help you get dressed or change your clothes before dinner -- your clothes are user friendly and you can do it yourself. These changes also came with shifts to how homes are laid out, with more open floor plans, especially open kitchens and dining rooms. Having formal staff makes a lot less sense if your kitchen can be seen from everywhere on the first floor -- it was easier when they were hidden away in a ground floor kitchen where the upper class never went. Same with open dining rooms and parlors/living rooms. It feels less strange to have live in staff when they are mostly hidden away from you and your guests and only appearing periodically to serve a meal or tend the fire. Even just full time (not even live in) staff can feel a lot more intrusive in moderation homes where the "working" spaces flow directly into and are visible from the relaxing and entertaining spaces. |
You are an awful person. Do you know how hard it is to have a loved one with serious mental health issues? If not, you should stfu |
After World War Two Get ready to see this come back People are going to have no where to work they will want to be housed and they will be servants treated like crap and paid pennies They can all thank the cult of stupidity Trumps supporters who are rich peers of mine are already discussing this. Women should be particularly worried. But hey you know nothing to worry about piggy’s got it under control. Maga has no idea what they have done to their children’s lives |
Um, no. We're expats. I've had live-in help in multiple countries, including Russia, India, Singapore, and China. It isn't what you think. It isn't good for anybody, even the fortunate employers of the live-in help. In India, especially, you have to deaden part of your soul in order to share space with someone so very unfortunate, with so limited a future and so miserable a life, to have this, and EVERY lower to upper middle class to upper class person there has a maid. The maids are regularly taken out of school and put into live-in servant (slave) situations, and beating, rapes, and mistreatment of the help is, from what I saw, the norm. It warps something in the culture that embraces such a system. |
This. If will make a comeback if they succeed. |
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When I visit relatives in Latin America every upper middle class & higher house has a small bedroom off the kitchen with its own bathroom for the live in maid who works Monday through half days on Saturday. It is just how every house is designed. Then there are day workers who also come for the day like a cook, gardener , etc.
Many houses in the US aren’t designed with having live in hired help. |
I don't most Americans are comfortable with the idea of someone waiting on them hand and foot. We are much more likely to see other people as equals and not just the help designed to blend into the background. |