So you are working even though you don't really need the money? Lucky you. |
OP here- Unfortunately I do need the money, my husband and I have been talking about maybe trying to find a position where I could bring her, but I really would hate to quit on someone. I've never left before a contract was over and I would hate to end things badly with any family. I love the child I care for sometimes when I snuggle DC, I am wondering if my child is getting similar affection. Each day the sadness grows so I think it is something worth exploring further, idk if I could stay home for 3-4 years though. I enjoy my job, probably more than most, if I could care for my child and make a decent income of course that is what I'd do. But I don't think I have seen decent income for SAHMs, or nannies bringing their kids. |
Be creative and see how you can care for your own child and someone else's child. If you're good, you can find the right match, especially if the other family has only one child. |
If you don't have any flexibility to reduce your income for a few years, you probably are just stuck. If you can reduce your income, you could try finding a job with fewer hours or keep looking for a position that allows you to bring your child. Its really rare for an employer to go for a nanny bringing her child so this shouldn't be your only plan. If you can afford to take some evening on-line classes or get some certifications it may be easier to find a higher paying job for fewer hours. Housecleaning where you go to someone's house once a week or every week and deep clean for 4-5 hours pays more than just being a nanny. It is harder work but you might be able to match your salary for far fewer hours a week if you can line up several dependable jobs. |
This is what I do. I earn enough to support my child's private school tuition and a mortgage. I'm a single mom. |
OP here, I do have certifications and ECE, also in my last year of my ugrad degree. In my experience I have never seen such an arrangement above $9/hr. I make twice that right now, and I couldn't afford to cut my salary in half.....I really do feel stuck
As far as housecleaning, I can't imagine anyone would hire me since I have no housecleaning experience, and that really is not my cup of tea, not trying to be picky just being honest. Is there a differential wage for part-time nannies, or a before and after care/pick up drop off arrangement? Would I be able to make at least close to my salary now?
That's amazing but I imagine that's really rare. |
A few things. First, as you undoubtedly know, this is pretty much the reality of any working mother. Whether you nanny, try cases, treat patients, assemble cars, if you work, you are away from your child. Second, I actually agree with you that infants do better with individual care. I didn't want to place my son in daycare and couldn't afford a nanny of our own, so we found a good nanny share, and I felt comfortable that my son is getting individual attention and affection. We paid $9/hr. Perhaps you can look into something like this? Third, I know it seems like your child's schedule is totally at odds with yours so you barely see her, but rest assured that she will not sleep like this forever, nor will you always come home at 8 pm. My son is now 2 and a half. I spend about an hour in the morning getting him ready for the day, and then enjoy my evenings with him from 6 to 9 pm. This describes the reality of most working moms. |
Chill out, Che. We're a rich brown family with a nanny who never brought her child. Pffft!! That was the sound of your theory deflating. |
To the "rich brown family", what ethnicity is the nanny? How old was your/her child when you hired her? Who cared for her child? |
OP here- Thanks for your thoughtful response. I must agree it will not last forever, and the best choice may be to stick it out. Financially it is what's best for my family, and I'll just have to try my hardest to make those hours count. I think I will also give up on date night/weekends so I have more time with her. |
The nanny is also brown of a different ethnicity from us. Our child was an infant. She's 50+ so we assume her child/ren are beyond the stage of needing care. I don't know who cared for her child/ren. She never brought it up. Why does her and our ethnicity matter at all, my little revolutionary? |
OP- So your cousin watches your baby for 50 hours/week? Do you pay her? Just curious! You are lucky. |
Are you serious? You are comparing a 50+ old with GROWN children, to a young mother with an infant?? ha! |
OP here, my cousin does not watch her the whole 50 hours, my husband works less hours than I do, so she watches her maybe 35hrs for the most, and yes I do pay her. But she isn't in childcare, she is a SS benefactor and her husband works so she is just as home. Honestly though I don't think she is that great at caring for children, I've had to teach her A LOT. But it is much cheaper and I know she cares about my daughter. |
I'm not comparing anything with anything. I'm responding to righteous poster who made all kinds of prejudgments. Your thread title doesn't say "nannies with infants." |