Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like to hang out with adults and we have some interesting conversations, but I hate having their kids over. They can’t afford to hire a babysitter for the night and have 3 and 2 kids ranging 3 - 12. OMG, it’s like a zoo. Kids have no manners and no boundaries. They scream, do gymnastics on our coach, jump on our beds, bang on the piano, run around the house with food dropping it on the floors and touching every wall with greasy hands.
Parents completely ignore this behavior as they consider it normal. This is what they do at home.
I specifically say "adults only." They find babysitters if they want to accept invitation.
Anonymous wrote:I like to hang out with adults and we have some interesting conversations, but I hate having their kids over. They can’t afford to hire a babysitter for the night and have 3 and 2 kids ranging 3 - 12. OMG, it’s like a zoo. Kids have no manners and no boundaries. They scream, do gymnastics on our coach, jump on our beds, bang on the piano, run around the house with food dropping it on the floors and touching every wall with greasy hands.
Parents completely ignore this behavior as they consider it normal. This is what they do at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like to hang out with adults and we have some interesting conversations, but I hate having their kids over. They can’t afford to hire a babysitter for the night and have 3 and 2 kids ranging 3 - 12. OMG, it’s like a zoo. Kids have no manners and no boundaries. They scream, do gymnastics on our coach, jump on our beds, bang on the piano, run around the house with food dropping it on the floors and touching every wall with greasy hands.
Parents completely ignore this behavior as they consider it normal. This is what they do at home.
Yeah, I hated this when DC was little. So we usually had families with multiple kids destroying the house. We put up with it b/c, well, we just did. It got such that we would put away things (toys, games, etc.) that we didn't want lost, destroyed, etc. Anything else out there was literally going to be maimed by the hoard. The parents didn't really care or enforce any sort of manners for their kids.
I think it just is what it is at that age. You manage it. And be soooo glad when it's over.
Anonymous wrote:I like to hang out with adults and we have some interesting conversations, but I hate having their kids over. They can’t afford to hire a babysitter for the night and have 3 and 2 kids ranging 3 - 12. OMG, it’s like a zoo. Kids have no manners and no boundaries. They scream, do gymnastics on our coach, jump on our beds, bang on the piano, run around the house with food dropping it on the floors and touching every wall with greasy hands.
Parents completely ignore this behavior as they consider it normal. This is what they do at home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nanny here- I hate parents like this. My boss is friends with a sahm and the kids are like wild animals. When the sahm comes over, she expects free childcare and just walks away. I bring her kids right back to her, and inform her that this house has an unfenced pool, and I’m not able to supervise her kids (who won’t listen) outside. Every time she looks so shocked, because the first time she did come over, she successfully dumped her brats on me, and I told myself no ma’am, never again. I don’t understand parents who allow their kids to jump on couches, run and scream in other peoples homes, and just behave terribly in other peoples homes. Makes me wonder what they do all day, staying home, when I’m a nanny 60 hours a week and in the past 25 years none of my nanny kids have acted like that.
How do you know how the kids act when they’re out with their parents on weekends? Lots of parents who work 60+ hours a week have no idea how to manage their own children when the nanny’s not there. And lots of sahps are so inured to their kids’ behavior that they might not think anything of it when out and about. Parents of all stripes have poorly behaved kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Both moms are stay at home moms. So it can’t be justified with working full time.
They want a break and they see coming to your place as a break. It’s annoying when other people’s kids misbehave. If their parents won’t call them out, then you can do it in a nice way.”Hey, guys, we don’t jump on the couch at our house” etc.
Anonymous wrote:Nanny here- I hate parents like this. My boss is friends with a sahm and the kids are like wild animals. When the sahm comes over, she expects free childcare and just walks away. I bring her kids right back to her, and inform her that this house has an unfenced pool, and I’m not able to supervise her kids (who won’t listen) outside. Every time she looks so shocked, because the first time she did come over, she successfully dumped her brats on me, and I told myself no ma’am, never again. I don’t understand parents who allow their kids to jump on couches, run and scream in other peoples homes, and just behave terribly in other peoples homes. Makes me wonder what they do all day, staying home, when I’m a nanny 60 hours a week and in the past 25 years none of my nanny kids have acted like that.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are not like this. You need better friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you set them up for failure? Are there things that they can play with - something for a large age range (legos, magnatiles, wherever).
Just out on a movie (made for all ages like Minions, Encanto, whatever) works too.
+1 Did you do anything to prepare for 5 kids under the age of 12, or were you really expecting them all to sit and quietly read a book the whole time?
Anonymous wrote:Stop inviting them over to your house. Meet up at parks or public places.
If they ever are at your House then use your voice and tell them to stop jumping on the furniture, tell them to be gentle with the toys. Don’t be afraid to speak up because you’ll end up resentful for when they do things like breaking toys. If they don’t listen to you then tell the parents to please speak to them because they’re not listening to you and you’d like them to stop jumping on the furniture.