Anonymous wrote:Your nanny’s role has to change.
Our nanny was half housekeeper. As soon as she got to the house, she would help with breakfast. She did this while I worked and when I stopped working. She did the dishes, wiped the table, vacuumed crumbs. She may do laundry one morning, clean up the playroom, etc for a few hours per day. She also cooked for us. I know that all nannies don’t do this but it would not have worked for our home for the nanny to continue only providing childcare when I didn’t work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just realized you will be massively judged for not working and having a nanny.
NP. Why? Is it her somehow her moral obligation to work?
- working mom
It's not. But she wants to both farm out her childcare and not work. Yes, people are going to judge her for that. I'm all for being a SAHM. But if you are one, you don't need a nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Communication and loose schedule are your best bets at making it work with a nanny. Play to your strengths. I, personally, suck at crafts and don’t speak French so nanny handles that. Nanny is tone-deaf and I was a musician so I handle that. We both love to cook, play and spend hours outside so we divide those up.