Anonymous wrote:I don't think anyone suggested this -- what about a live-in au pair? If you have a spare bedroom/bathroom.
Also, just because you work from home, doesn't mean you have to stay home. You could go work from coffee shop or coworking space.
For activities, every community has a library. Maybe you can find otger moms and put together a play group.
I am a day care parent and I love it. Our day care (here in DC) is awesome. I have no idea how they will be in your area. You should visit them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People should give OP a break. Yes she is anxious but she’s from another culture where daycares aren’t used.
OP, care.com is not that hard to use. I usually do a manual search in addition to posting a job and write to the ones that seem promising. We do paper screen (ask for CV and have them answer a few questions), phone interview, in person, and if all that goes well check references and working interview of 1-2 weeks where I am home. I think it is fine to not want to trust your kid with a random person. But we have used nannies and preschool for under age 3, which is when I think they are fairly vulnerable/ less verbal. You just do your due diligence and that is it.
As for the people who are saying day care is usually fine, tragedies happen. A baby was killed by a worker at a daycare in town last year. Extremely sad. I think the worker had other life stress and took it out on baby. That is why I personally want to meet and vet the people who are caring for my child. I would not leave it to another person (agency, director). It’s a high burnout job and requires a certain combination of maturity, positive energy, and mental stability.
Are you suggesting that tragedies don't happen with nanny care? One reassurance with day care is that there is always more than one caregiver on site.
Anonymous wrote:People should give OP a break. Yes she is anxious but she’s from another culture where daycares aren’t used.
OP, care.com is not that hard to use. I usually do a manual search in addition to posting a job and write to the ones that seem promising. We do paper screen (ask for CV and have them answer a few questions), phone interview, in person, and if all that goes well check references and working interview of 1-2 weeks where I am home. I think it is fine to not want to trust your kid with a random person. But we have used nannies and preschool for under age 3, which is when I think they are fairly vulnerable/ less verbal. You just do your due diligence and that is it.
As for the people who are saying day care is usually fine, tragedies happen. A baby was killed by a worker at a daycare in town last year. Extremely sad. I think the worker had other life stress and took it out on baby. That is why I personally want to meet and vet the people who are caring for my child. I would not leave it to another person (agency, director). It’s a high burnout job and requires a certain combination of maturity, positive energy, and mental stability.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - I’ve worked at home before in a one bedroom apt and know to stay out of the way and have had no complaints from my current nanny. The issue is we are both at home, nanny would have to drive which my husband doesn’t like, I’m stressing about candidates as I’d have to use care.com as there are no listservs and I don’t know anyone there. I was set up to visit daycares but after conversation with my mom my fears are back in because she articulated what I’m anxious about. Just a mess.
You need therapy
Anonymous wrote:OP - I’ve worked at home before in a one bedroom apt and know to stay out of the way and have had no complaints from my current nanny. The issue is we are both at home, nanny would have to drive which my husband doesn’t like, I’m stressing about candidates as I’d have to use care.com as there are no listservs and I don’t know anyone there. I was set up to visit daycares but after conversation with my mom my fears are back in because she articulated what I’m anxious about. Just a mess.
Anonymous wrote:OP - I’ve worked at home before in a one bedroom apt and know to stay out of the way and have had no complaints from my current nanny. The issue is we are both at home, nanny would have to drive which my husband doesn’t like, I’m stressing about candidates as I’d have to use care.com as there are no listservs and I don’t know anyone there. I was set up to visit daycares but after conversation with my mom my fears are back in because she articulated what I’m anxious about. Just a mess.
Anonymous wrote:OP what town? There is no part of CT that is so rural that you won't be able to find high-quality childcare or activities a nanny can take a child to.
IF you both work at home, and you are prone to anxiety, use a daycare or you will probably be replacing nannies every so often.