PP. DH was definitely working more than full-time, although I wasn't. |
I know a few families who had one parent working normal hours and the other trying to make partner (ie that spouse ate, slept and wept law). |
About half of my friends who were teachers quit working after having kids |
The only real answer here is that some people make a lot of money. |
Also, believe it or not, for people with 3-4 or more kids, having a nanny can be cheaper than paying for daycare or camps. |
A lot of military officers’ wives have 9-5 jobs but because the deployed spouse is completely gone, they have nannies. I work with a few officers’ wives and they all had nannies when the kids were young. One plus for them is that nannies are fairly easy to find if you are a military officer—there are usually a lot of enlisted guys who have young wives with no kids that need a job. |
Live-in nanny here. I’ve worked for dual military families twice, and they NEED a nanny, no way to get around it. |
Do a nanny share. We paid the going rate, and taxes. It worked out to about 24k every year from each family. Dayare would have been about 20k/year. |
Why did you think that as a teacher you could afford a nanny? Does your DH make tons of money? Find a daycare. |
The second answer is that a ton of people get financial help from their parents. It makes a huge difference. |
Short answer: without a nanny right now given DL and lack of other childcare. I would lose my job. I would not be able to get it back. Thus even if nanny makes more than me I pay her from savings if I can. Welcome to 2020!! |
Nannies have never been a possibility for us, as much because of space as money. We definitely can't afford the $40K/yr that some of our friends pay for their professional nannies, but we could probably do a nanny share or an au pair. The problem is we don't have room for either, and we just haven't had the luck of finding a nanny share where we wouldn't be expected to host at least one day a week.
Childcare is such a dividing line. We've struggled since I was first pregnant with childcare. Struck out on finding a share, struggled to find daycares, struggled to find reliable sitters for one-off things, etc. It's the number one thing I talk about when people ask what the hardest thing about having kids is. But it's interesting how many people will look at you like you're crazy when you say this. They either have money or are lucky in other ways (like having a basement apartment in their house in which to host an au pair). The idea of struggling literally for years to find and then afford reliable childcare is so foreign to them. It makes the conversation around fixing childcare in this country really hard. People who don't get it... just don't get it. |
I'm a nanny and I get it. Childcare choices in this country suck! Just keep in mind that I cost my family closer to 60k a year and after taxes I can just about afford rent in this area, a car, a phone and food. Health insurance is a no go. I get vacations but can't afford to travel anywhere. So while I understand that sole child care is very expensive for the average family, nannies do need to make some kind of living. |
Well, yeah. Private schools are full of ppl in social justice jobs, writing etc. with parents paying the tuition, too. |
Why do people feel entitled to have a nanny? |