Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, I will spend hundreds of thousands of dollars over many years that I otherwise don't need just in case there is a pandemic that locks us in for a few months. Hasn't happened in a hundred years, but you can never be too cautious.
I don’t think that is what OP is saying at all.
My kids are still very young but having an educated nanny, a former teacher, care for them all day - in quarantine and not - is a great thing. We are not wealthy but we really sacrifice to have her. When the kids are both in elementary school we will work something out to keep her. Our nanny is older and has already said she’d like to cut her hours when the kids are in school.
No. OP is saying exactly what the first PP said. Let them eat cake, you know.
Very insensitive, when so many people, including the middle class, some of whom had nannies, are out of work.
Didn’t OP say “wealthy”? Wealthy parents?
She did, because she does not know what wealthy means in the context of maintaining a nanny when one doesn't need one.
I think you don’t understand what wealthy means.
Stop trying to turn this into an attack on middle class families worried about losing their jobs. Those families never had a nanny to begin with, those kids were in daycare or aftercare. Wealthy families by definition are not worried about job loss or savings or paying the bills.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a nanny for school aged children. I’ve been with the family since both kids were born 9 years ago. Most of my nanny friends were let go when the kids went to kindergarten. My family chose to continue to keep me on and pay me full time to be on call, because they don’t have the kinds of jobs where they can just stay home for sick days, days off school, breaks........ or a pandemic.
I’m a former teacher and now I homeschool the kids, while the parents work from home. Things are running pretty smooth.
I don’t understand why wealthy parents who can afford to continue paying, choose to dump their nannies when the kids go off to school. I’m hoping that something like this will make parents realise how important it is to keep your nanny, if you can afford to do so. .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, I will spend hundreds of thousands of dollars over many years that I otherwise don't need just in case there is a pandemic that locks us in for a few months. Hasn't happened in a hundred years, but you can never be too cautious.
I don’t think that is what OP is saying at all.
My kids are still very young but having an educated nanny, a former teacher, care for them all day - in quarantine and not - is a great thing. We are not wealthy but we really sacrifice to have her. When the kids are both in elementary school we will work something out to keep her. Our nanny is older and has already said she’d like to cut her hours when the kids are in school.
No. OP is saying exactly what the first PP said. Let them eat cake, you know.
Very insensitive, when so many people, including the middle class, some of whom had nannies, are out of work.
Didn’t OP say “wealthy”? Wealthy parents?
She did, because she does not know what wealthy means in the context of maintaining a nanny when one doesn't need one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, I will spend hundreds of thousands of dollars over many years that I otherwise don't need just in case there is a pandemic that locks us in for a few months. Hasn't happened in a hundred years, but you can never be too cautious.
I don’t think that is what OP is saying at all.
My kids are still very young but having an educated nanny, a former teacher, care for them all day - in quarantine and not - is a great thing. We are not wealthy but we really sacrifice to have her. When the kids are both in elementary school we will work something out to keep her. Our nanny is older and has already said she’d like to cut her hours when the kids are in school.
No. OP is saying exactly what the first PP said. Let them eat cake, you know.
Very insensitive, when so many people, including the middle class, some of whom had nannies, are out of work.
Didn’t OP say “wealthy”? Wealthy parents?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, I will spend hundreds of thousands of dollars over many years that I otherwise don't need just in case there is a pandemic that locks us in for a few months. Hasn't happened in a hundred years, but you can never be too cautious.
I don’t think that is what OP is saying at all.
My kids are still very young but having an educated nanny, a former teacher, care for them all day - in quarantine and not - is a great thing. We are not wealthy but we really sacrifice to have her. When the kids are both in elementary school we will work something out to keep her. Our nanny is older and has already said she’d like to cut her hours when the kids are in school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, I will spend hundreds of thousands of dollars over many years that I otherwise don't need just in case there is a pandemic that locks us in for a few months. Hasn't happened in a hundred years, but you can never be too cautious.
I don’t think that is what OP is saying at all.
My kids are still very young but having an educated nanny, a former teacher, care for them all day - in quarantine and not - is a great thing. We are not wealthy but we really sacrifice to have her. When the kids are both in elementary school we will work something out to keep her. Our nanny is older and has already said she’d like to cut her hours when the kids are in school.
No. OP is saying exactly what the first PP said. Let them eat cake, you know.
Very insensitive, when so many people, including the middle class, some of whom had nannies, are out of work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, I will spend hundreds of thousands of dollars over many years that I otherwise don't need just in case there is a pandemic that locks us in for a few months. Hasn't happened in a hundred years, but you can never be too cautious.
I don’t think that is what OP is saying at all.
My kids are still very young but having an educated nanny, a former teacher, care for them all day - in quarantine and not - is a great thing. We are not wealthy but we really sacrifice to have her. When the kids are both in elementary school we will work something out to keep her. Our nanny is older and has already said she’d like to cut her hours when the kids are in school.
Anonymous wrote:Sure, I will spend hundreds of thousands of dollars over many years that I otherwise don't need just in case there is a pandemic that locks us in for a few months. Hasn't happened in a hundred years, but you can never be too cautious.