Anonymous wrote:I'm not a doormat so I don't pay babysitter to get her dinner. She can eat beforehand if all she's babysitting is a sleeping infant. And yeah, I'd tell her to put her dishes in the sink next time she arrives.
Anonymous wrote:Normal. It’s so annoying, but not worth saying something over imo.
Anonymous wrote:Mom of tweens here. I’ve used about 40 babysitters in my parenthood. It’s half and half. Honestly, some of the nest ones are much less good with the kids so I don’t use this as a factor.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who did a lot of teenage babysitting, figuring out whether the dishwasher was clean or dirty, or where to put the dishes when they're drying, was really confusing. I was an anxious enough kid that I just didn't eat because it was too stressful.
Can you say "the dishwasher is dirty, please add your dishes when you're done" or something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this what we’ve come to? Adults can’t figure out how to tell someone to kindly put their dishes in a dishwasher? You seriously need to crowd source this?
Damn.
Damn. Why should adults have to tell other employed adults how to wash a dish.
Because everyone wants it done differently.
And because employers tell their employees what to do. It's how the whole employment thing works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is she a teenager? She probably thinks she's being polite and not messing with your belongings unnecessarily.
OP here. She’s 25 and an RN. The dish drainer and dish soap are right there if she doesn’t feel comfortable putting them in the dishwasher.
Clearly, this is annoying me!
This is a “you” problem.
So this is what all babysitters do?