Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We hosted an Au pair for two years. I will not do it again for so many of the reasons above and also add another one - I grossly underestimated how much I would have having a 21 year old roommate. Ugh. Gladly switched back to a nanny. It was never about finding “cheap” childcare for us. I thought the flexibility would be great and also looked forward to a cultural exchange. My experience was less than stellar.
Tell the truth. You opted for an au pair because you wanted the cheapest child care which does not speak well of you and how much you value your children's welfare,!
Anonymous wrote:We hosted an Au pair for two years. I will not do it again for so many of the reasons above and also add another one - I grossly underestimated how much I would have having a 21 year old roommate. Ugh. Gladly switched back to a nanny. It was never about finding “cheap” childcare for us. I thought the flexibility would be great and also looked forward to a cultural exchange. My experience was less than stellar.
Anonymous wrote:We’ve had au pairs for many years and now have three, ages 1, 4, and 8. People on this board dump on au pairs but in my experience they’re more than competent for the kind of care you want. We could easily afford a nanny’s hourly rate but no one would take our split schedule.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I also have three kids, older than yours but similar age spread. There's no WAY I would have relied on an au pair for childcare when they were little. Even now, it's not appealing. Keep in mind that you'll need a good bit of space for this person to live in, and also that most au pairs are very young themselves. I don't want a fourth child to parent.
I'd do either nanny or daycare, personally. If the latter, we found it worthwhile to be at an established center that had a robust preschool curriculum, so the kids could stay until kindergarten. Not cheap, but worth every penny, IME.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hair all over the bathroom
Her dishes always left out or in the sink
Dietary restrictions so she needed $$$ food
Our partying
Smelling like a hangover at work
Giggling to her cell phone
Staying behind when we go on vacation and having people over at our house
The dramatics of friendships, boys, missing home
At least she was consistent about not doing the dishes? The pettiness of APs who tell each other to hand wash their dishes so they can be sure to ONLY do theirs and maybe the kids' too during work hours to avoid touching a dish that may have been the host parents' or produced by the kids when AP wasn't working is part of the "spirit" of the program.
Anonymous wrote:Hair all over the bathroom
Her dishes always left out or in the sink
Dietary restrictions so she needed $$$ food
Our partying
Smelling like a hangover at work
Giggling to her cell phone
Staying behind when we go on vacation and having people over at our house
The dramatics of friendships, boys, missing home
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the heck is young woman drama?
Flakiness. Taking employer feedback very personally. Suddenly ditching work to spend time with boyfriend(s). Staying out late partying. General immaturity.