Anonymous wrote:I would stick with the boring job for right now. In five years, your kids will be in such a different place, and the exciting, unpredictable job will definitely be a possibility. But right now, you have enough craziness and unpredictability in your family life. Keep work boring.
Anonymous wrote:I know a two-physician couple who provided free room and board in exchange for this occasional last minute coverage outside of the standard workday (when they had regular childcare).
It seemed to work out well for them.
I am also not really sure what exactly you are looking for, but I have had au pairs in the past, and it is a LOT of work and expense. I don't think it would be worth it for just a few hours/wk of childcare, and I don't think either of you would really be happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe i am misunderstanding what you are looking for.
When I read your post, what I am imagining is:
-On a random Tuesday morning at 6:45 am, you are knocking on your live in nanny/au pair's door telling her that your work scheduled a conference call in 15 minutes and you need her to wake up and watch the kids.
But maybe what you mean is:
-On Thursday afternoon you sit down with the nanny and say "Stacy, next week I'm going to need you on Monday from 7 am -9 am, and then again from 3-4 pm. I don't need you on Tuesday, but on Wednesday i will need you from 10 am-6 pm."
Which version is closer to what you are looking for?
In the middle I think? I'd know the day BEFORE at the latest I think. Mornings and evenings on my own with all 3 are rough, so I'm thinking given I'll have to pay for the time anyways, having someone that can generally help me in the morning rush and then again with maybe preparing dinner / getting everyone to bed would be the norm but one of two of those slots a week I'd just need them to do it on their own. I can't imagine a live in nanny would want so few hours, it'd probably be ideal for a lot of au pairs but I dont know if they're generally capable with 3 young kids? I thought about having 2 live out nannies, one that could cover like 7-1 and the other 1-8 (again witth me there for a lot of those hours but needing the coverage in case i can't be) but for some reason that feels like juggling more. but maybe its not.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe i am misunderstanding what you are looking for.
When I read your post, what I am imagining is:
-On a random Tuesday morning at 6:45 am, you are knocking on your live in nanny/au pair's door telling her that your work scheduled a conference call in 15 minutes and you need her to wake up and watch the kids.
But maybe what you mean is:
-On Thursday afternoon you sit down with the nanny and say "Stacy, next week I'm going to need you on Monday from 7 am -9 am, and then again from 3-4 pm. I don't need you on Tuesday, but on Wednesday i will need you from 10 am-6 pm."
Which version is closer to what you are looking for?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want someone to be "always available" you will have to pay them for that. You can't expect that just because your care giver lives in, that they will be willing to work at a moment's notice.
So it sounds like the solution would be for you to pay accordingly for a 24/7 nanny. Is that in your budget?
Yes I have the budget for that and obviously will pay and don't expect any one person to be available 24/7. I will continue with our regular day time care and am looking for solutions that other people have found for early mornings / evenings and an understanding of how it went for them". Since you seem to be on an antagonizing path I'll go ahead and say for you "omg why did you even bother to have kids" or whatever troll like comment you'd like to make
Anonymous wrote:Do you know your/DH’s schedule in advance? You might be able to make do with a roster of people to call if you can give a few days notice.
But if he just might not come home on time one day with no warning (bc he is in surgery or whatever), then I don’t think you can take the job with kids this young.
Anonymous wrote:If you want someone to be "always available" you will have to pay them for that. You can't expect that just because your care giver lives in, that they will be willing to work at a moment's notice.
So it sounds like the solution would be for you to pay accordingly for a 24/7 nanny. Is that in your budget?