Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could do all that too if I got to clock out at closing time and go home to my quiet empty apartment.
No, you couldn't. There is no excuse for a house to be trashed at the end of the day. This happens because OP allows her child to both make and leave messes all over the house. Also, OP is not organized and has no one to blame but herself. I was a a SAH for ten years, with zero help except a cleaning woman who came in every other week. I never had a trashed house. I made a menu every week and stuck to it with grocery shopping once a week. So did every woman I knew whether they worked or stayed home. It is nothing more than a matter of being organized.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SAHM with a tidy house.
My kids don’t trash the house. We clean as we go. Done with cars? Pick them up. Done with blocks? Pick them up.
We are also out of the house a lot, which means we don’t need to clean as much.
I clean while they play. I fold laundry and watch tv at the end of the day. I rest during nap, so I’m ready for the afternoon.
That cleaning technique only works when they play with one toy and move onto another so it’s easy to say clean up x before you continue with y.
A recent example of mine is kids making a cargo ship out of the playroom couch. It needs a kitchen so they arrange all the food on the ottoman. A band will be playing on the ship so out come the instruments and stuffed animal performers. Don’t forget to grab the tinker toys to make the ship’s steering wheel! Rolling toys are arranged in a pattern on the floor to form the edges of the ship. We all ride on the couch as the ship chefs serve fine meals.
It can be quite a mess by the end of the day.
PP and I don’t really let them play like that, unless we are rained or snowed in. They’re outside playing like that but not in my living room!
Anonymous wrote:It's her job and she is good at it. I presume you are good at your job too?
Anonymous wrote:I have a 6mo and a 2yo. On days I'm alone with them, by the end of the day the house is trashed, I'm exhausted, and all I've accomplished is keeping everyone happy, fed, and hopefully food picked up along the way.
When the nanny has them all day, I come home to a spotless house, fresh made baby food, bruschetta made from tomatoes she picked from our garden, and my laundry folded (many of these tasks are above and beyond what we ask of her). It's AMAZING. How does she / some caregivers (whether parents or nannies) accomplish so much?!? I honestly can't comprehend it
Anonymous wrote:OP here - wow this thread took a turn for the unnecessarily nasty!
I am appreciative towards and impressed by the talents of many nannies / SAHPs. Yet because I don't somehow have those same talents and / or also have other responsibilities i'm trying to fill at the same time (like catching up on my work email or ordering groceries during nap time) and / or am just really f'ing tired I'm "lazy, disorganzed, imcompetent" etc?
For posters responding that way you're either supremely bored in which case get a hobby, unhappy about something and lashing out here in which case get therapy, or truly unable to appreciate and celebrate differences in people without somehow feeling defensive and attacked, in which case I guess i'm just relieved I don't know you in real life!
Anonymous wrote:Nanny has them 8 hours, you have them 24 hours. Whatever, don't lose her as she sounds great.
Anonymous wrote:Nanny has them 8 hours, you have them 24 hours. Whatever, don't lose her as she sounds great.
Anonymous wrote:Nanny gets to go home at the end of the day. That’s it right there! When I was a nanny, you better believe I had the house spotless, the kids doing a nice, quiet, organized activity, and a healthy dinner prepared by 6pm when the parents returned too but now that I’m a SAHM to 2 young kids, it’s a much different story. Out house is always a mess, I’m always exhausted, and meals are thrown together last minute.
The mental load is a lot greater when you’re caring for your own kids and you’re in charge 24/7 instead of 8-6.