Anonymous wrote:Okay, thanks everyone. Particularly the poster who said they suspected this was a "tale". I think that tells me everything I need to know. I really thought other employers were getting the same kind of requests from their employees...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn't make sense. Why are you paying for her prescriptions and lawyer fees? Is she getting paid enough money to survive without needing your family to give her loans? I would NEVER ask my employer for a loan, no matter how big or small. It's totally inappropriate for her to think of your family as a bank who will just loan her money anytime she needs it. What does she now need a loan for that costs thousands of dollars? I don't blame your husband for getting annoyed. Just curious, how many hours does she work and how much is she paid a week? I'm a nanny and I'm sure many other nannies on here will agree that this is wrong. I think it's great that you love your nanny but giving her loans is probably the dumbest thing you could do. Sorry you are in this predicament- you will have to learn how to say no to her.
She works full time 1000 a week. Plus I pay for a lot of "extras" that come up. I appreciate your feedback. She is really wonderful and I'm sure that money is tight for her family, but I'm starting to feel taken advantage
of. I hate feeling like saying "no" to her makes me feel cheap or that it will upset her and then have her care for my kids.
Your story sounds more like a tale, OP. What do you mean by "full time"?
40 hours a week?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn't make sense. Why are you paying for her prescriptions and lawyer fees? Is she getting paid enough money to survive without needing your family to give her loans? I would NEVER ask my employer for a loan, no matter how big or small. It's totally inappropriate for her to think of your family as a bank who will just loan her money anytime she needs it. What does she now need a loan for that costs thousands of dollars? I don't blame your husband for getting annoyed. Just curious, how many hours does she work and how much is she paid a week? I'm a nanny and I'm sure many other nannies on here will agree that this is wrong. I think it's great that you love your nanny but giving her loans is probably the dumbest thing you could do. Sorry you are in this predicament- you will have to learn how to say no to her.
She works full time 1000 a week. Plus I pay for a lot of "extras" that come up. I appreciate your feedback. She is really wonderful and I'm sure that money is tight for her family, but I'm starting to feel taken advantage
of. I hate feeling like saying "no" to her makes me feel cheap or that it will upset her and then have her care for my kids.
Anonymous wrote:This doesn't make sense. Why are you paying for her prescriptions and lawyer fees? Is she getting paid enough money to survive without needing your family to give her loans? I would NEVER ask my employer for a loan, no matter how big or small. It's totally inappropriate for her to think of your family as a bank who will just loan her money anytime she needs it. What does she now need a loan for that costs thousands of dollars? I don't blame your husband for getting annoyed. Just curious, how many hours does she work and how much is she paid a week? I'm a nanny and I'm sure many other nannies on here will agree that this is wrong. I think it's great that you love your nanny but giving her loans is probably the dumbest thing you could do. Sorry you are in this predicament- you will have to learn how to say no to her.