Anonymous wrote:I was a nanny a few years ago who did this but it was part time. It actually worked out well because I was in grad wanted to visit my boyfriend out of state every other weekend. You may find someone. You never know. I would consider doing this when my son goes to school. I am a sahm now and I'd love find a part time childcare position like this when my son starts school. I love babies but I don't want to have another child.
Anonymous wrote:OP.
can I please ask that you talk to your mother about current safety guidelines.
Things have changed A LOT since she raised a child.
Have her take a cpr class to start.
Inform her about sleeping on the back and nothing in the crib (that means a blanket too.) If she drives, have her take a car seat safety class.
And talk to her about a baby's schedule. Napping, independent play, tummy time.
When the baby start a solids talk about the current recommendations on the age and foods.
I hope it works out for you all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
I'm not worried. The woman I found is a SAHM with a 15-month-old and 1 school age kid.
She doesn't need a full-time job, and she's around to fill in if my mom has to cancel.
I initially didn't want a nanny that needed to bring her kid, because I wanted 1:1 for my daughter, but she'll still get 1:1 the weeks she's with my mother, and she'll get some socialization the weeks she's not, so it's kind of the best of everything.
I appreciate everyone's advice, but sometimes things work out even when they are against the "norm".
Still, naive.What about longer illnesses for either you mom or babysitter (this is not a nanny). Is she going to tote around your kid to go get her school aged child? And I seriously doubt that when the babysitter thinks she has the week off, she is going to drop everything when your mom cannot come, or your mom gets sick of travel.
OP it's rare that an entire DCUM has the same opinion. When that happens, heed the advice.
Anonymous wrote:
Exactly. She "doesn't need the money." So when an opportunity to go out of town or go on her older child's field trip or whatever comes up, she's not going to feel 100% committed to sticking to her agreement to watch your child. ESPECIALLY if it's a week that your mom is supposed to be there.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
I'm not worried. The woman I found is a SAHM with a 15-month-old and 1 school age kid.
She doesn't need a full-time job, and she's around to fill in if my mom has to cancel.
I initially didn't want a nanny that needed to bring her kid, because I wanted 1:1 for my daughter, but she'll still get 1:1 the weeks she's with my mother, and she'll get some socialization the weeks she's not, so it's kind of the best of everything.
I appreciate everyone's advice, but sometimes things work out even when they are against the "norm".
Anonymous wrote:OP, can you please come back and post an update when this spectacular shit show blows up--maybe we could take bets on how long it will last? I'll put $100 on less than a month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is PP. And you went from being concerned about this yesterday, to finding the perfect solution to a unique problem 2 hours ago? hmm
OP here.
I asked here because people kept telling me it wouldn't work so I wanted in put.
I had met with the lady before and I liked her but I thought 1:1 would be better it's one reason we're not doing daycare right now.
It's not all that unique, lots of other moms posted about their mothers or MILs caring for their kids part time.
Just because it's not the solution you think is right doesn't mean it's wrong or that I'm a troll.
I'm doing what I think is right for my family and that's all that matters. I don't need to please DCUM or you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
I'm not worried. The woman I found is a SAHM with a 15-month-old and 1 school age kid.
She doesn't need a full-time job, and she's around to fill in if my mom has to cancel.
I initially didn't want a nanny that needed to bring her kid, because I wanted 1:1 for my daughter, but she'll still get 1:1 the weeks she's with my mother, and she'll get some socialization the weeks she's not, so it's kind of the best of everything.
I appreciate everyone's advice, but sometimes things work out even when they are against the "norm".
Still, naive.What about longer illnesses for either you mom or babysitter (this is not a nanny). Is she going to tote around your kid to go get her school aged child? And I seriously doubt that when the babysitter thinks she has the week off, she is going to drop everything when your mom cannot come, or your mom gets sick of travel.
OP it's rare that an entire DCUM has the same opinion. When that happens, heed the advice.