Anonymous wrote:Of course jobs get stale. That happens everywhere and in any job. However, it is the combination of how soon it goes stale for nannies and how they call it being taken for granted that looks a lot like whining.
If my boss didn't take me for granted by the year and a half mark--or more accurately, take my above average performance for granted--it would reflect a failure on my part. This just means you've mastered the basics of the job and settled into the relationships and now need to set new professional goals for yourself.
Tell the boss you'd like to learn more about cooking and would be willing to help plan and prepare family meals. Get some child development books and start testing out new techniques for talking with that tantrum-prone toddler you care for. Buy some activity guides on Amazon and start planning quality teaching activities for your charges, beyond the usual playdates, library visits, and crayon projects. Take responsibility for your own professional motivation and learn to take pride in constantly pushing your own performance boundaries. Understand that your boss appreciates this even if she doesn't express it on a daily basis. This will be recognized eventually, although not necessarily in the form of nanniversary cards and daily praise from your boss. You might get your due when you move on and your boss raves about you to that prospective new employer who is offering a couple dollars more than you now earn but expects skill and experience in all these areas that would be considered "extras" in your current job. Or when you finally get that raise from your current family because when MB finally has a moment to reflect on her hectic life, she realizes that you are a gem who makes it infinitely easier.
And no, you don't go asking for or expecting an immediate raise because you've taken on extra duties. You start thinking of these things as part of the package that makes you an exceptional nanny instead of as "extras" that you do in the hope of winning daily praise from your boss. Then, once you've mastered these things, you ask for a raise at your next annual meeting after pointing out all the ways you add value. This is what professionals do.
In a lot of ways, jobs are like romantic relationships. The intense thrill of newness wear off after a year or so. At that point you either settle into something that is less exciting but no less meaningful, or you move on like a thrill junkie and miss out on what could be a great "mature" relationship. The same is true of nanny jobs. If you always move on after 1.5 to 2 years, you miss the opportunity to truly become part of your charges' life and soul in ways that they will remember long after you're gone.