Anonymous wrote:No. I never heard of that. Your friend must be a nightmare. Good for the nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if that’s all it was she would have told them that and given notice. There is more to this story.Anonymous wrote:The parents have big jobs, long hours and quite a few little kids. It was too much work I guess.
That’s more than enough. They clearly overworked her. With 3 or more kids and a expectation to be ‘on’ 8 or more hours a day the family should have 2 nannies on rotation.
Anonymous wrote:What does her contract say about paying back for the use of the room/food/utilities and whatever other perks?
I'm guessing youre hearing the 1-sided story.
Are you sure " left in the middle of the night" wasn't an embellishment? Maybe the Nanny left after she put the kids to bed/her shift was over, had a huge argument with the parents which she felt was the last straw, packed up her items, and by then it was 10/1030/maybe even 11pm...not as dramatic as the title of your post makes it seem.
Anonymous wrote:Poor thing! She didn't know how to tell her bosses, and maybe didn't know how to say goodbye to the kids. I hope they were not mistreating her in any way.
Anonymous wrote:I quit today after working for the same business for 8 years. I just sat outside my work unable to make myself go inside.
I am not burning any bridges. Any work place would be glad to have me, and I suspect they expect me back by Friday when it gets busy. There's just so much wrong with my work right now that I'm better off staying home or I would go crazy.
New hires quit within months, weeks, and even days after being hired. There is not one big thing, but collection of small things that nobody cares to fix.
It was not a pleasant thing to do and I suspect it was even harder for the nanny, but I think her employers know exactly why she quit like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bad boss
+1 your friends nanny was not being compensated enough to either deal with all those little kids, the parents or both.
Tell your friend she needs to pay way more to get a nanny who is willing to deal with all that.
Anonymous wrote:if that’s all it was she would have told them that and given notice. There is more to this story.Anonymous wrote:The parents have big jobs, long hours and quite a few little kids. It was too much work I guess.
Anonymous wrote:If that's really how it went down, it's because she was afraid of one or both of the parents. Someone must have done something pretty bad to make her that afraid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be very upset to learn that my new nanny ghosted her former employer. If her reason was abuse, that would turn me off as well since she could bring whatever trauma she experienced into dealing with my children.
You are awful.
You would risk your kids to someone who you didn’t think was fit because you thought it made you a better person? Are you even a parent?
I would wish her the best but she wouldn’t be my nanny.
Do you ask every nanny candidate if she's ever been sexually assaulted?
I’ve had the same nanny since my oldest was born, but I would not ask that. I would ask if she was currently employed though, which is a standard question . In this scenario, she would have 1. lied in the interview and said no, 2. told the truth that she was employed and then lied about giving notice or 3. told the said yes, but conditions are so terrible that instead of giving notice, I am going to leave in the middle of the night. If she told me #3, I would not hire her. If I found out she lied (scenario 1 or 2) I would not keep her.