Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not. I'd switch off with a grandparent or my husband during nap time. I'd be willing to hire a sitter like you describe but only when the kids are old enough to speak up for themselves, let me know afterwards how it went (like later preschool years).
Please. What do you really think a sitter is going to do wrong? Kidnap your kids? Keep in mind that women commit way fewer crimes than men and I assume the sitter will be Female.
Op - just have the sitter come right as you’re about to put the kids to bed. Don’t have the sitter give the kids a bath, take them anywhere. Basically make it so there is no room for any accidents. Get a baby monitor you can view on your phone while you’re out and go somewhere nearby.
Abuse, neglect, lack of skill/CPR training for handling emergencies like a febrile seizure or choking, outdated safety knowledge (puts baby to sleep on his tummy or sets the car seat with baby inside up on a table), alcohol/drug issues I don't know about - I can think of a lot of things that could potentially go wrong with a sitter that I haven't properly vetted, had personal recommendations for, or hired with a trial period.
Do you live in a low income area? I can see maybe coming across these behaviors in a lower income neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not. I'd switch off with a grandparent or my husband during nap time. I'd be willing to hire a sitter like you describe but only when the kids are old enough to speak up for themselves, let me know afterwards how it went (like later preschool years).
Please. What do you really think a sitter is going to do wrong? Kidnap your kids? Keep in mind that women commit way fewer crimes than men and I assume the sitter will be Female.
Op - just have the sitter come right as you’re about to put the kids to bed. Don’t have the sitter give the kids a bath, take them anywhere. Basically make it so there is no room for any accidents. Get a baby monitor you can view on your phone while you’re out and go somewhere nearby.
Abuse, neglect, lack of skill/CPR training for handling emergencies like a febrile seizure or choking, outdated safety knowledge (puts baby to sleep on his tummy or sets the car seat with baby inside up on a table), alcohol/drug issues I don't know about - I can think of a lot of things that could potentially go wrong with a sitter that I haven't properly vetted, had personal recommendations for, or hired with a trial period.
This is crazy. Your kid doesn’t need to eat when the sitter is there. Feed, bathe and change the kids before he sitter arrives. No need for a car seat and doubt the sitter would even have one. Everyone knows about putting a baby on their back. To be fair - many parents have alcohol and drug problems. I can’t imagine now being able to spot alcohol or drug abuse in a sitter. I don’t even know what a febrile seizure it but assume the babysitter can call 911 just as quickly as I can.
When it comes down to it parenting young kids is tiring but isn’t that hard.
I can’t imagine parenting with this much fear and not using a sitter for the reasons you stated. Your life must be terrible. Your female hormones meant to keep your kid alive in a bad environment are limiting you from enjoying life in the safest world there has ever been.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not. I'd switch off with a grandparent or my husband during nap time. I'd be willing to hire a sitter like you describe but only when the kids are old enough to speak up for themselves, let me know afterwards how it went (like later preschool years).
Please. What do you really think a sitter is going to do wrong? Kidnap your kids? Keep in mind that women commit way fewer crimes than men and I assume the sitter will be Female.
Op - just have the sitter come right as you’re about to put the kids to bed. Don’t have the sitter give the kids a bath, take them anywhere. Basically make it so there is no room for any accidents. Get a baby monitor you can view on your phone while you’re out and go somewhere nearby.
Abuse, neglect, lack of skill/CPR training for handling emergencies like a febrile seizure or choking, outdated safety knowledge (puts baby to sleep on his tummy or sets the car seat with baby inside up on a table), alcohol/drug issues I don't know about - I can think of a lot of things that could potentially go wrong with a sitter that I haven't properly vetted, had personal recommendations for, or hired with a trial period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not. I'd switch off with a grandparent or my husband during nap time. I'd be willing to hire a sitter like you describe but only when the kids are old enough to speak up for themselves, let me know afterwards how it went (like later preschool years).
Please. What do you really think a sitter is going to do wrong? Kidnap your kids? Keep in mind that women commit way fewer crimes than men and I assume the sitter will be Female.
Op - just have the sitter come right as you’re about to put the kids to bed. Don’t have the sitter give the kids a bath, take them anywhere. Basically make it so there is no room for any accidents. Get a baby monitor you can view on your phone while you’re out and go somewhere nearby.
Abuse, neglect, lack of skill/CPR training for handling emergencies like a febrile seizure or choking, outdated safety knowledge (puts baby to sleep on his tummy or sets the car seat with baby inside up on a table), alcohol/drug issues I don't know about - I can think of a lot of things that could potentially go wrong with a sitter that I haven't properly vetted, had personal recommendations for, or hired with a trial period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not. I'd switch off with a grandparent or my husband during nap time. I'd be willing to hire a sitter like you describe but only when the kids are old enough to speak up for themselves, let me know afterwards how it went (like later preschool years).
Please. What do you really think a sitter is going to do wrong? Kidnap your kids? Keep in mind that women commit way fewer crimes than men and I assume the sitter will be Female.
Op - just have the sitter come right as you’re about to put the kids to bed. Don’t have the sitter give the kids a bath, take them anywhere. Basically make it so there is no room for any accidents. Get a baby monitor you can view on your phone while you’re out and go somewhere nearby.
Anonymous wrote:I haven't read all the responses but I live in an area of the world where this is common (expat overseas). Given your parent are there I'd feel totally fine about it- because your parents can semi-supervise without doing the actual work. My nightmares are about abuse or neglect or an earthquake and the babysitter doesn't get them out of the house; if the parents are there, I'd be less worried.
On the other hand if the baby is sleeping maybe thegrandparents can just callyou when s/he wakes up?