Anonymous wrote:1. Take a bath and go to bed early tonight. Sleep helps everything. As long as you have one clean-enough outfit for tomorrow, it will be fine.
2. Give up on some things. Let your kid pick out their own clothes, no matter how mismatched. Order takeout more often. Pull the clean dishes straight from the dishwasher for a few days. If it seems overwhelming, and it's not directly impacting health and safety, let it go for a few days.
3. Downsize stuff. Hide half the toys- chances are DS/DD won't even notice. You can donate them later or rotate a few in as a surprise.
4. Don't bring new things into the house, if you can avoid it. They inevitably end up on the kitchen counter, adding to the chaos. Throw out junk mail before it gets to the house if you can. Stop ordering things but food and the bare essentials for a few weeks.
Also, if you are working from home, take an hour mid-day and do some stuff before you are tired and busy with your kid. Email will still be there when you get back. I put on training videos while I prep dinner, so i can say I'm still working. If you are in meetings over dinner, it's totally fair to take a mid-day hour to do stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pffffft to "hacks". The things that have made my life easier are:
1) Nanny instead of daycare
2) Cleaning lady
3) Grocery delivery
4) DH who does his fair share
5) Short commute (this meant giving up space, paying more $$$ for our home)
The only "hack" type thing I'd say is dry shampoo, ha!
I have not found this to be the case at all. We’ve had to switch to a nanny b/c the pandemic and I really miss my kids’ preschool. Now I’ve got extra people in my home all day generating extra commotion and wear and tear on my house, plus I have to provide paid leave/deal with taxes/pay for a workers comp policy, etc. We’ve gone through a couple in-home providers now and they each have their own issues (poor time management, not carrying out the activities I asked them to do, etc.). Maybe I haven’t found the perfect match, but I’ve talked to friends with similar issues. Honestly I find managing an employee to be a headache I don’t want. This has made me realize how much I never want to move into management!
Before covid we had a really nice montessori school a mile down the road that offered a nice meal plan. I could drop my kids for the day and they’d do really cool activities and crafts that I didn’t have to prepare for. It cost about as much as a nanny, but I think quality out of home care (esp if you work at home) is GOLDEN.
You just haven't found the right nanny. I never had to get my kids bundled up and out the door in the morning. I didn't have to take up any of my precious morning family time with drop off. I didn't have to pack or unpack any bags or wash any bottles. I didn't have to waste any of my precious evening family time with pick up. I didn't have to take time off if my kids were sick, and they weren't even sick much because they weren't in daycare. My nanny made my kids breakfast, lunch, and snacks, including deciding WHAT to make. She did all the kids' laundry, sheets, dishes, and had the house tidy and de-cluttered when I walked in the door every evening. If I were running late at the office every now and then -- NBD -- she was flexible in the evenings. She was never late, pretty much never sick. She took the kids on outings, formed regular weekly playgroups with other nannies in the neighborhood, and had plenty of ideas to keep the kids stimulated. "Managing" her was a total breeze. (When my kids turned 3, I did put them in part-time preschool for added socialization and structure and activities, and nanny did the drop off and pick up for that!) She also got my kids on a later nap schedule than that offered at most daycares - so kids were actually pleasant in the evenings.
The "commotion" you are enduring is a factor of the pandemic and suddenly being WFH when your home was probably not optimally set up for such with little ones around. I agree that would be stressful. But it's of course not part of the normal nanny versus daycare calculus. I'm also a huge proponent of preschool (like I said, I put my kids in part-time starting at age 3), but a good nanny made MY LIFE easier, hands down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pffffft to "hacks". The things that have made my life easier are:
1) Nanny instead of daycare
2) Cleaning lady
3) Grocery delivery
4) DH who does his fair share
5) Short commute (this meant giving up space, paying more $$$ for our home)
The only "hack" type thing I'd say is dry shampoo, ha!
I have not found this to be the case at all. We’ve had to switch to a nanny b/c the pandemic and I really miss my kids’ preschool. Now I’ve got extra people in my home all day generating extra commotion and wear and tear on my house, plus I have to provide paid leave/deal with taxes/pay for a workers comp policy, etc. We’ve gone through a couple in-home providers now and they each have their own issues (poor time management, not carrying out the activities I asked them to do, etc.). Maybe I haven’t found the perfect match, but I’ve talked to friends with similar issues. Honestly I find managing an employee to be a headache I don’t want. This has made me realize how much I never want to move into management!
Before covid we had a really nice montessori school a mile down the road that offered a nice meal plan. I could drop my kids for the day and they’d do really cool activities and crafts that I didn’t have to prepare for. It cost about as much as a nanny, but I think quality out of home care (esp if you work at home) is GOLDEN.
You just haven't found the right nanny. I never had to get my kids bundled up and out the door in the morning. I didn't have to take up any of my precious morning family time with drop off. I didn't have to pack or unpack any bags or wash any bottles. I didn't have to waste any of my precious evening family time with pick up. I didn't have to take time off if my kids were sick, and they weren't even sick much because they weren't in daycare. My nanny made my kids breakfast, lunch, and snacks, including deciding WHAT to make. She did all the kids' laundry, sheets, dishes, and had the house tidy and de-cluttered when I walked in the door every evening. If I were running late at the office every now and then -- NBD -- she was flexible in the evenings. She was never late, pretty much never sick. She took the kids on outings, formed regular weekly playgroups with other nannies in the neighborhood, and had plenty of ideas to keep the kids stimulated. "Managing" her was a total breeze. (When my kids turned 3, I did put them in part-time preschool for added socialization and structure and activities, and nanny did the drop off and pick up for that!) She also got my kids on a later nap schedule than that offered at most daycares - so kids were actually pleasant in the evenings.
The "commotion" you are enduring is a factor of the pandemic and suddenly being WFH when your home was probably not optimally set up for such with little ones around. I agree that would be stressful. But it's of course not part of the normal nanny versus daycare calculus. I'm also a huge proponent of preschool (like I said, I put my kids in part-time starting at age 3), but a good nanny made MY LIFE easier, hands down.
Anonymous wrote:The best thing I heard on DCUM was “only touch something once”. Like, don’t put a plate from the table to the sink when you can put it in the dishwasher. Don’t put shoes on the steps to go upstairs: just bring them up.
It’s so silly but that mantra has helped me keep a tidy house!

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have a set two-week meal rotation, one grocery list for each week in an app. No need to think about meals or your grocery list.
Let your house be messy.
Don't fold laundry.
This post made my palms sweat. What do you do with your laundry if you don't fold it?!?
DP. You leave it in a laundry basket and pull stuff out as you want to wear it.
NP. I hang up all clothes that I wear. The rest just goes in their particular drawer not folded. Like the leggings drawer, the PJ drawer, the workout drawer, the underwear drawer, sock drawer. Laundry is super duper easy here. And hanging keeps everything looking nice.
Np, WOW. Impressed. Have lived the 'leave it in a basket' method but have not tried this one. Excited to try it!
Anonymous wrote:Independent playtime! My 12 months old plays by himself in his crib for 30 mins twice a day, and has since he was 6 months old. That extra hour a day is amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pffffft to "hacks". The things that have made my life easier are:
1) Nanny instead of daycare
2) Cleaning lady
3) Grocery delivery
4) DH who does his fair share
5) Short commute (this meant giving up space, paying more $$$ for our home)
The only "hack" type thing I'd say is dry shampoo, ha!
I have not found this to be the case at all. We’ve had to switch to a nanny b/c the pandemic and I really miss my kids’ preschool. Now I’ve got extra people in my home all day generating extra commotion and wear and tear on my house, plus I have to provide paid leave/deal with taxes/pay for a workers comp policy, etc. We’ve gone through a couple in-home providers now and they each have their own issues (poor time management, not carrying out the activities I asked them to do, etc.). Maybe I haven’t found the perfect match, but I’ve talked to friends with similar issues. Honestly I find managing an employee to be a headache I don’t want. This has made me realize how much I never want to move into management!
Before covid we had a really nice montessori school a mile down the road that offered a nice meal plan. I could drop my kids for the day and they’d do really cool activities and crafts that I didn’t have to prepare for. It cost about as much as a nanny, but I think quality out of home care (esp if you work at home) is GOLDEN.
Anonymous wrote:People regularly suggest paper plates. That never sounds like it will make life significant easier to me, but I will try it. We already do a lot of screen time. Give me other suggestions, please.
Anonymous wrote:People regularly suggest paper plates. That never sounds like it will make life significant easier to me, but I will try it. We already do a lot of screen time. Give me other suggestions, please.