Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to fire her and find your self esteem. It is not your fault that she's disrespectful. It is your fault, however, that you are taking this. You confront her and then fire her, or just summarily fire her, but under no circumstances should you keep her after you tell her she's rude. Your cleaning lady can do a lot of bad things to your stuff and to you. Don't even give her the chance.
Thanks. You are 100% right about the self-esteem issue. The fear is that she IS a good cleaning lady and I might have a hard time finding one as good. That's my dilemma.
I know exactly what you mean!My dog sitter trashes the house, I leave it spotless when going on vacation and come back to mess and dirt....I would fire her but she is so responsible, my dog is safe with her and not abused, brushed, fed and provided water.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You pay her $120 to clean your house and you expect her to have a smile on her face and gratitude in her heart. I would resent you too.
That comes to $30 an hour in income for the cleaning person. Cleaning people can and often do clean two houses a day, 5 days a week. That is $1200 a week in income, probably tax free.
That works out to $60,000 a year - equivalent to $80,000 if it's tax-free. It's hard work, but it requires no education. Plenty of people with college degrees don't earn that, even here in DC.
[/b]Anonymous[b wrote:]Fire her via text and be done with it. She doesn't deserve more than that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You pay her $120 to clean your house and you expect her to have a smile on her face and gratitude in her heart. I would resent you too.
That comes to $30 an hour in income for the cleaning person. Cleaning people can and often do clean two houses a day, 5 days a week. That is $1200 a week in income, probably tax free.
Anonymous wrote:You pay her $120 to clean your house and you expect her to have a smile on her face and gratitude in her heart. I would resent you too.
Anonymous wrote:You pay her $120 to clean your house and you expect her to have a smile on her face and gratitude in her heart. I would resent you too.
Anonymous wrote:You pay her $120 to clean your house and you expect her to have a smile on her face and gratitude in her heart. I would resent you too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know, I know....such a 1st world problem, but I am wondering if anyone runs into problems with a rude or disrespectful cleaning lady. I have and wonder if 1) I am too sensitive, 2) my being nice and friendly is mistaken for weakness and somehow inviting it, or 3) it's just typical these days. Two examples (since she was just here):
1.) I walked into the bedroom to check on something (I had given her instructions last time about it and she didn't do it), and she said, "I know, I know. But you're in the way, and you can leave." Then she should made a go-away motion with her hand. (Yes, really!)
2.) I wanted to give her a holiday bonus, which would be double the $120 fee. I wrote out a check for $240, and she told me that she wanted the bonus amount in cash. I said I didn't have $120 lying around, and she told me there is an ATM a few blocks away and I could go get cash - and she'd wait. I told her I didn't want to go out in the rain, but she insisted she wanted cash. So, in order to keep her happy, I grabbed my umbrella and went out.
Am I making too big a deal over these types of things? Is it just stuff one needs to put up with to keep a cleaning lady?
I can't believe you put up with her, especially that ATM thing
She wants cash as a gift, so it's not a paycheck. If it's a gift, no taxes. Get it?
That is completely false. I get a bonus at work, and the amount is included on my w-2 as wages. I certainly don't waltz into my boss' office and demand the bonus in cash so I don't have to pay tax on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to fire her and find your self esteem. It is not your fault that she's disrespectful. It is your fault, however, that you are taking this. You confront her and then fire her, or just summarily fire her, but under no circumstances should you keep her after you tell her she's rude. Your cleaning lady can do a lot of bad things to your stuff and to you. Don't even give her the chance.
Thanks. You are 100% right about the self-esteem issue. The fear is that she IS a good cleaning lady and I might have a hard time finding one as good. That's my dilemma.
I know exactly what you mean!My dog sitter trashes the house, I leave it spotless when going on vacation and come back to mess and dirt....I would fire her but she is so responsible, my dog is safe with her and not abused, brushed, fed and provided water.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to fire her and find your self esteem. It is not your fault that she's disrespectful. It is your fault, however, that you are taking this. You confront her and then fire her, or just summarily fire her, but under no circumstances should you keep her after you tell her she's rude. Your cleaning lady can do a lot of bad things to your stuff and to you. Don't even give her the chance.
Thanks. You are 100% right about the self-esteem issue. The fear is that she IS a good cleaning lady and I might have a hard time finding one as good. That's my dilemma.