Anonymous wrote:At 12 I was absolutely babysitting alone. Mother's helper is like 10.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you’re a little too neurotic to actually benefit from such an opportunity (are you literally going to have the mothers helper trail you room to room as you do laundry, make dinner, etc???…please don’t subject her to this!)
but yes for most people with more reasonable boundaries this would be a great option to get a little bit of a break at a very reasonable rate.
Anonymous wrote:Is 12 an okay age for a mother's helper? There is a girl down the street that wants to get experience before she is babysitting age and her mom reached out to me and offered her services as a mother's helper.
I have twins and would never ever leave her in the same room alone with my babies ever but as an extra pair of hands? Good idea? Bad?
She charges $5-10/hour and can help out 2hrs a day 2x a week. If love to be able to put laundry away or make dinner. I know this child won't have actual responsibility besides playing with baby and tbh probably just one baby. I can wear one and trade off.
Am I crazy for considering?
Again I would be in the same room at all times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks all! I feel so much better about this! My SIL spooked me by saying I'll end paying to babysit the 12 year old and now have to entertain her too. But I really think it will be helpful to have the extra hands once a week and yes I'm a few years having someone we trust to actually babysit would be amazing if this works out
Has your SIL ever been around a 12 yo? They don’t need entertaining and certainly don’t need babysitting. Honestly you should just do a trial run and see if you’re comfortable with her. I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perfect age! Start with being in the same room, but depending on her maturity level, you may quickly feel confident allowing her to be in a room alone for short periods with one baby.
If you're lucky, she will "grow" with your family, and you'll have a reliable independent babysitter in a few years.
+1
I think a 12 year old can potentially do a lot of care, even of infants, but don't assume she knows anything. Be sure to talk to her about the most important dangers, like babies or toddlers putting small objects in their mouths, not leaving them alone on a couch or chair they could fall off of, etc. So at first you'll likely be doing some training, but she'll likely learn very quickly.
I'm a mom of middle schoolers who started babysitting at 11, for very young kids, even newborns, which honestly shocks me. This wasn't being a mothers helper - I was alone with them for 4-6 hours at a time. And earning $1/hr per kid. Lol, times change.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks all! I feel so much better about this! My SIL spooked me by saying I'll end paying to babysit the 12 year old and now have to entertain her too. But I really think it will be helpful to have the extra hands once a week and yes I'm a few years having someone we trust to actually babysit would be amazing if this works out
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems fine to me! I am assuming you find her mature and will assess her skills as she starts working with your babies. How old are the twins? At 12 I did a lot of babysitting and people left me in charge of lots of babies all alone. Seems hard to believe today.
I meant to add - I’m sure you will feel comfortable leaving the room pretty soon if it’s going well with her! Hard to get anything done otherwise. Give yourself a break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perfect age! Start with being in the same room, but depending on her maturity level, you may quickly feel confident allowing her to be in a room alone for short periods with one baby.
If you're lucky, she will "grow" with your family, and you'll have a reliable independent babysitter in a few years.
+1
I think a 12 year old can potentially do a lot of care, even of infants, but don't assume she knows anything. Be sure to talk to her about the most important dangers, like babies or toddlers putting small objects in their mouths, not leaving them alone on a couch or chair they could fall off of, etc. So at first you'll likely be doing some training, but she'll likely learn very quickly.
I'm a mom of middle schoolers who started babysitting at 11, for very young kids, even newborns, which honestly shocks me. This wasn't being a mothers helper - I was alone with them for 4-6 hours at a time. And earning $1/hr per kid. Lol, times change.
Anonymous wrote:Perfect age! Start with being in the same room, but depending on her maturity level, you may quickly feel confident allowing her to be in a room alone for short periods with one baby.
If you're lucky, she will "grow" with your family, and you'll have a reliable independent babysitter in a few years.