Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places I have not stepped foot in months -- a grocery store, a gas station or a dry cleaners. All the things that I need from these places are taking care of by someone else, without my ever even really thinking about them. It's like food is in the pantry and gas is in the tank and clean clothes are in my closet just magically without my ever having to think about it. But I do appreciate it greatly.
That just sounds like the life of a child to me.
What I'm paying for is my time. I work very hard and earn and good salary, so I am fortunate to be able to pay someone to do all of that. Then when I am home, I am able to spend my time with my family instead of running around crazy doing errands I don't enjoy. What is childish about that?
What struck me about it was that I have been teaching my kids for years to clear their own plate from the table, make and pack their own lunch, be responsible for their things, and do their own laundry. It seems like a step back in terms of personal responsibility to never do any of those things. It just seems infantilizing to me. If your cleaning lady and cook go on vacation, do you just get take-out and let the laundry pile up? If you spill something, do you clean it or wait for the maid to do it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places I have not stepped foot in months -- a grocery store, a gas station or a dry cleaners. All the things that I need from these places are taking care of by someone else, without my ever even really thinking about them. It's like food is in the pantry and gas is in the tank and clean clothes are in my closet just magically without my ever having to think about it. But I do appreciate it greatly.
That just sounds like the life of a child to me.
What I'm paying for is my time. I work very hard and earn and good salary, so I am fortunate to be able to pay someone to do all of that. Then when I am home, I am able to spend my time with my family instead of running around crazy doing errands I don't enjoy. What is childish about that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am more shocked at how appalled and nasty people are at things that "rich" or event moderately rich people do. Based on what I am about to post, there are people on DCUM who would be outraged, and say "why in the world can't you do that yourself." Of course I CAN do these things, but we can afford to pay someone, and it allows time for me to do other things. For what it's worth, most of my friends in the Bethesda area have all these things also. Our HHI is under 300K.
I had a baby nurse for 2 weeks. It was great. About half of my friends had full time baby nurses, and many had night nurses a couple nights a week.
I have a cleaning person once a week. We have someone else mow the lawns.
I SAH, but when my kids were little I had a nanny come 2 days a week so I could go to appointments and run errands. (Where I live, many SAHMs have some help). I do not have family in the area able to babysit on a weekday. This set up made it so I could go to the dentist without a screaming one year old, and it's not so easy to find mid-week babysitters you trust with your kids.
We do not go on crazy vacations, and when we do we often use points or miles. We stay at Marriott level or less nice hotels, not Ritz or Four Seasons. We drive 2 cars, but they are toyotas not BMWs. We live comfortably, and we now in the grand scheme we are well off, but we are not at the level where we are private jet, exclusively luxury hotel people. But in DCUM world, we will get slammed for being rich and clueless, and how dare I not be a martyr for doing absolutely everything in the home since I am supposedly a useless excuse for a human living off of my husband.
Hey, do what you want to do without being defensive. But with that HHI, no one in DC thinks you are rich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places I have not stepped foot in months -- a grocery store, a gas station or a dry cleaners. All the things that I need from these places are taking care of by someone else, without my ever even really thinking about them. It's like food is in the pantry and gas is in the tank and clean clothes are in my closet just magically without my ever having to think about it. But I do appreciate it greatly.
That just sounds like the life of a child to me.
What I'm paying for is my time. I work very hard and earn and good salary, so I am fortunate to be able to pay someone to do all of that. Then when I am home, I am able to spend my time with my family instead of running around crazy doing errands I don't enjoy. What is childish about that?
NP. I won't say childish, but I'd say it would make someone fall out of touch with things. I've never heard of hiring a gas pumper, for instance.
Anonymous wrote:I am more shocked at how appalled and nasty people are at things that "rich" or event moderately rich people do. Based on what I am about to post, there are people on DCUM who would be outraged, and say "why in the world can't you do that yourself." Of course I CAN do these things, but we can afford to pay someone, and it allows time for me to do other things. For what it's worth, most of my friends in the Bethesda area have all these things also. Our HHI is under 300K.
I had a baby nurse for 2 weeks. It was great. About half of my friends had full time baby nurses, and many had night nurses a couple nights a week.
I have a cleaning person once a week. We have someone else mow the lawns.
I SAH, but when my kids were little I had a nanny come 2 days a week so I could go to appointments and run errands. (Where I live, many SAHMs have some help). I do not have family in the area able to babysit on a weekday. This set up made it so I could go to the dentist without a screaming one year old, and it's not so easy to find mid-week babysitters you trust with your kids.
We do not go on crazy vacations, and when we do we often use points or miles. We stay at Marriott level or less nice hotels, not Ritz or Four Seasons. We drive 2 cars, but they are toyotas not BMWs. We live comfortably, and we now in the grand scheme we are well off, but we are not at the level where we are private jet, exclusively luxury hotel people. But in DCUM world, we will get slammed for being rich and clueless, and how dare I not be a martyr for doing absolutely everything in the home since I am supposedly a useless excuse for a human living off of my husband.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places I have not stepped foot in months -- a grocery store, a gas station or a dry cleaners. All the things that I need from these places are taking care of by someone else, without my ever even really thinking about them. It's like food is in the pantry and gas is in the tank and clean clothes are in my closet just magically without my ever having to think about it. But I do appreciate it greatly.
That just sounds like the life of a child to me.
What I'm paying for is my time. I work very hard and earn and good salary, so I am fortunate to be able to pay someone to do all of that. Then when I am home, I am able to spend my time with my family instead of running around crazy doing errands I don't enjoy. What is childish about that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places I have not stepped foot in months -- a grocery store, a gas station or a dry cleaners. All the things that I need from these places are taking care of by someone else, without my ever even really thinking about them. It's like food is in the pantry and gas is in the tank and clean clothes are in my closet just magically without my ever having to think about it. But I do appreciate it greatly.
That just sounds like the life of a child to me.
What I'm paying for is my time. I work very hard and earn and good salary, so I am fortunate to be able to pay someone to do all of that. Then when I am home, I am able to spend my time with my family instead of running around crazy doing errands I don't enjoy. What is childish about that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're a full pay family in private school but it's not easy. We're doing fine but no crazy vacations to Europe or anything like that.
A causal friend was telling me about their spring break plans and how she was so worried about her kids flying. Thinking it was their first plane ride- I started giving her tips about Benadryl, snacks etc. She quickly stopped me- she was worried because her kids had never traveled commercial before.
ha!!!
Anonymous wrote:My DD and her college roommates got a bad housing lottery number (meaning they won't get the suite they want to live in next year). So the parents of one of the girls just bought a $4M 4 BR house for the girls to share next year. Sweet.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Places I have not stepped foot in months -- a grocery store, a gas station or a dry cleaners. All the things that I need from these places are taking care of by someone else, without my ever even really thinking about them. It's like food is in the pantry and gas is in the tank and clean clothes are in my closet just magically without my ever having to think about it. But I do appreciate it greatly.
That just sounds like the life of a child to me.