Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you care what she thinks? Not having one because some random bitch thinks it’s cheap is the dumbest thing ever.
My only reservation with au pairs is ask yourself if you want a young adult living with you.
Yes, this! The downside is that you are their host mom/dad, they may feel homesick, they may wreck your car, they may have relationship drama, or a health scare - and you have to deal with all of that. It’s not just a job.
An au pair is a teenage babysitter who lives with you and comes with the potential problems above.
A nanny you've had for six years is presumably a professional that has done good work.
Yes, you could get a great au pair or a crappy nanny. But yes, bigger picture, an au pair is like getting a Honda (your kids will be alive at the end of the day) while keeping a professional, experienced nanny is like having a nicer model Tesla (you have the best because you paid for the privilege).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No stigma. But please don’t be one too these assholes registering their au pair as a childcare worker to jump the vaccine line.
Oh, you *know* they will.
If I knew someone who did this, I would report them and also let media know. This should be a criminal offense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you care what she thinks? Not having one because some random bitch thinks it’s cheap is the dumbest thing ever.
My only reservation with au pairs is ask yourself if you want a young adult living with you.
Yes, this! The downside is that you are their host mom/dad, they may feel homesick, they may wreck your car, they may have relationship drama, or a health scare - and you have to deal with all of that. It’s not just a job.
An au pair is a teenage babysitter who lives with you and comes with the potential problems above.
A nanny you've had for six years is presumably a professional that has done good work.
Yes, you could get a great au pair or a crappy nanny. But yes, bigger picture, an au pair is like getting a Honda (your kids will be alive at the end of the day) while keeping a professional, experienced nanny is like having a nicer model Tesla (you have the best because you paid for the privilege).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you care what she thinks? Not having one because some random bitch thinks it’s cheap is the dumbest thing ever.
My only reservation with au pairs is ask yourself if you want a young adult living with you.
Yes, this! The downside is that you are their host mom/dad, they may feel homesick, they may wreck your car, they may have relationship drama, or a health scare - and you have to deal with all of that. It’s not just a job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you care what she thinks? Not having one because some random bitch thinks it’s cheap is the dumbest thing ever.
My only reservation with au pairs is ask yourself if you want a young adult living with you.
Yes, this! The downside is that you are their host mom/dad, they may feel homesick, they may wreck your car, they may have relationship drama, or a health scare - and you have to deal with all of that. It’s not just a job.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a government contractor and almost all the government employees I work with have a revolving door of au pairs because it's their cheapest option.
I'm cheap too (we use before/after care) but I don't want to take advantage of young women who are here for "cultural exchange", so no au pairs for me.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you care what she thinks? Not having one because some random bitch thinks it’s cheap is the dumbest thing ever.
My only reservation with au pairs is ask yourself if you want a young adult living with you.
Anonymous wrote:We’ve had the same nanny for the past 6 years. Now that both kids are in school full time, we really don’t need full time help. I’m considering an au pair since it would be cheaper and give us more flexibility. Another mom kindof implied I was being cheap. Is there a stigma around au pairs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve had the same nanny for the past 6 years. Now that both kids are in school full time, we really don’t need full time help. I’m considering an au pair since it would be cheaper and give us more flexibility. Another mom kindof implied I was being cheap. Is there a stigma around au pairs?
I cannot get past both kids being in school full time during a pandemic!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No stigma. But please don’t be one too these assholes registering their au pair as a childcare worker to jump the vaccine line.
Oh, you *know* they will.