Anonymous wrote:No way. You need childcare for the little ones and for the big ones. Spring break means they will be at home and not even in school. Will they stay home all together the entire time? Is she to take them grocery shopping all together? Make 3 meals for 5 days for 7 ppl by herself???
Anonymous wrote:OP: We originally planned this assuming my MIL would stay with the kids, since our nanny is unavailable that week. We asked too late, and she already had plans with other family. She kindly offered to rearrange and babysit, but we said no — we didn’t want her to miss time with her other grandchildren.
This is a short, adults-only trip to the Maldives — not a family trip. Our daughter’s break is longer than a week, and she already has a trip with friends planned, so this wouldn’t be her entire break.
We already plan for the younger kids (ages 4–9) to be in full-day camps, and there will be playdates. Responsibilities will be divided among the teens, who genuinely look up to their older sister and are responsible and trustworthy. She will be paid $4k-6k?, not 100% sure yet, for the five days , and we prefer not to hire another babysitter, as we don’t trust anyone else as much as our nanny.
MIL isn’t available and my parents are traveling. This arrangement only happens with her full agreement. Backup adults are available nearby (SILs, siblings) if needed.
We understand this wouldn’t work for every family, but we’re trying to plan it thoughtfully and respectfully, so thanks for the tips on making sure this goes smoothly.
Anonymous wrote:OP: We originally planned this assuming my MIL would stay with the kids, since our nanny is unavailable that week. We asked too late, and she already had plans with other family. She kindly offered to rearrange and babysit, but we said no — we didn’t want her to miss time with her other grandchildren.
This is a short, adults-only trip to the Maldives — not a family trip. Our daughter’s break is longer than a week, and she already has a trip with friends planned, so this wouldn’t be her entire break.
We already plan for the younger kids (ages 4–9) to be in full-day camps, and there will be playdates. Responsibilities will be divided among the teens, who genuinely look up to their older sister and are responsible and trustworthy. She will be paid $4k-6k?, not 100% sure yet, for the five days , and we prefer not to hire another babysitter, as we don’t trust anyone else as much as our nanny.
MIL isn’t available and my parents are traveling. This arrangement only happens with her full agreement. Backup adults are available nearby (SILs, siblings) if needed.
We understand this wouldn’t work for every family, but we’re trying to plan it thoughtfully and respectfully, so thanks for the tips on making sure this goes smoothly.
Anonymous wrote:I have 6, not 7, with similar age spread. My almost 19 year old is really good at managing the younger kids.
My biggest concern would be whether my teens would listen to her.
I think you should offer to pay her what your nanny would charge for the same time period, and then let her make the decision.
I also think I'd make sure that there are things built in so she gets breaks. For example, is it weekdays so the kids will be in school? Can you ask some of their friends' parents to invite kids over for sleepovers? Can they go to camp?
I'd also want to make other things easier for them. Stock up the freezer, etc . . .
Another option would be to see if she has a friend in college who would like to come home with her and help out and be well paid.
Anonymous wrote:Hi all — looking for advice and perspective.
My husband and I will be traveling abroad for 5 days soon. Our 19-year-old daughter will be home from college during that time, and we’re hoping she can help with her younger siblings (ages 15, 13, 11, 9, 6, and 4) while we’re away. Just to be clear, our 18-year-old won’t be home, so it would really be her managing things for that stretch. The kids will be on school break, so she won’t have to worry about school runs or things like that.
She’s responsible and conscientious, and we’re confident in her ability to handle things, but we also don’t want to overburden her or make her feel like it’s “her job.” Our nanny will be out for a planned family obligation, and my MIL will be traveling with my BIL and his kids, so our usual support network isn’t available. We could ask other siblings or extended family, but we’d really prefer not to inconvenience anyone unless it’s necessary.
We plan to compensate her, lay out a clear schedule, and provide all the emergency contacts and guidance she might need. That said, we want to be thoughtful about boundaries, fairness, and the logistics of having a single 19-year-old run the household for a few days.
Has anyone done something similar? Does this seem reasonable — having a college-age sibling as the main caregiver for a few days? Anything we should be thinking about in terms of boundaries, expectations, division of responsibilities, or backup plans?
Thanks so much for any insight — trying to navigate this in a way that’s reasonable, responsible, and keeps everyone’s dignity intact!