Anonymous wrote:I am so sick of her being a princess and having us fund her lifestyle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She might not realize you're saving the water for a storm. Don't expect her to be a mind reader.
If you see that she's been making bubble solution then buy some so she has bubbles!
This has to be a troll.
She gets a budget each month so she can buy her own bubbles out of her budget. She has been with us long enough to know eveeyone drinks out of the brita filter in the fridge. I am so sick of her being a princess and having us fund her lifestyle. Small things yes, but I know she is not that way with her things. She is entirely opposite with her own money budgeting to the cent. And before you feel sorry for her, she is a student still living with her parents and they pay for her housing, food so her thrift with her own money is not out of necessity. I just found something else she did not related to money this time but doing something with ours that she wouldn't do with her own things. I am tempted to fire her monday but probably should and will find replacement first.
Anonymous wrote:I hate this attitude. I'm as well off as I am because I am thrifty and NOT wasteful. So I think you should have a talk with her about "Please feel free to help yourself to the filtered water rather than plain sink water, but these cases of bottled water are us in case of storms or power outages." "Please use up all the art supplies before asking me to spend money on more. You're so creative I'll bet you can think up something wonderful!" "DH and I would appreciate if you would be mindful of costs when using supplies and playing with the kids. It's a skill we feel is important to learn and we'd like you to enforce that with them."
Anonymous wrote:She might not realize you're saving the water for a storm. Don't expect her to be a mind reader.
If you see that she's been making bubble solution then buy some so she has bubbles!
This has to be a troll.
(My nanny doesn't do grocery shopping so I have to do it. She says she doesn't think she can handle that and watching my child at the same time but she will go get a few things once in a while).
Anonymous wrote:So, I just found out my nanny drank all the bottled water I had bought for Sandy and future storms this winter.
It's not a big deal and if you ask me if I can afford it, yes. I noticed it was only 3.99 when it is on sale for a pack of 24. Assuming she goes through 1.5 a day, a pack of 24 will last 2-3 weeks and ten dollars a month is not a huge deal. Bigger deal is trying to keep it stocked and hauling it home. (My nanny doesn't do grocery shopping so I have to do it. She says she doesn't think she can handle that and watching my child at the same time but she will go get a few things once in a while).
Her attitude that because we are employers we must be rich and all her spending is a drop in the bucket is what bothers me.
Yes, we can afford the water as well as a lot of other things she is extremely wasteful with at our house. But we have values about money and drink filtered water at home ourselves. We don't say "let's make homemade bubble solution" and go through a whole bottle of dish detergent. Sure, we can afford that $4 bottle of dish detergent too and she doesn't do it every day but a bottle of bubble solution at CVS is sooo much cheaper than my dish soap.
Does this warrant a talk?