Anonymous wrote:I don't see how this thread is so far fetched! I worked for one family who were down right nasty, the kids would have on the same
poppy/ urinated diaper they slept in waiting for my arrival to change them. Dirty dishes from dinner stacked up in the sink, greasy counter tops, children's dirty breakfast dishes. She would let the baby throw food all over the floor! Once her husband was out of town, she took the trash out of the kitchen bin and sat it in the living room. I didn't touch it, after 3 days she got the hint and took it out herself.
So many other things happened and finally I couldn't take it anymore. When the oldest boy was at school and I took the baby to the
playground one nanny approached me asking me how it was going. I told her I was going to quit, she then informed me that I had been
the 15th nanny they had hired in a short amount of time. Every nanny came over and backed up her claim. This was the worst family by far!
Anonymous wrote:I can't believe anyone believes you're an MB, OP.
You're a nanny, OP and a clearly disgruntled one, perhaps for good reason.
Still, your thread is nothing but a troll thread. It is hard to invest any thought to help solve a fake troll problem.
Anonymous wrote:I can't believe anyone believes you're an MB, OP.
You're a nanny, OP and a clearly disgruntled one, perhaps for good reason.
Still, your thread is nothing but a troll thread. It is hard to invest any thought to help solve a fake troll problem.
Anonymous wrote:The poopy diaper is a bit ridiculous but why is asking nanny to wash bottles and baby dishes from the morning so terrible? I thought that was a benefit of having a nanny? In our house, we have 1-2 bottles from the night before that one parent washes in the morning before going to work (we do daycare so no one else is going to wash the bottles). But if I had a nanny, I would think it within her job to wash baby bottles. I'm not talking a weekend's worth of bottles but 1-2 from the night/morning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:pp you are utterly confused if you think you are not "the help". you are the help. Regardless of all the bs "I am family" they are so nice to me yadda yadda yadda, at the end of the day, you are paid to do a job, therefore you exchange "help" for money, just like a housekeeper which I am assuming you would refer to as "the help". I hate nannies that think they are above other people!!!!!!!!!!
Youre missing some pretty obvious social and historic context behind the phrase "the help" here. Don't get all snarky if you don't know what you're talking about. There is a HUGE difference between being a household employee who does her duties and being the help and getting completely taken advantage of.
It doesn't matter if you are called the help or an employee. Your job is your job and if it is beneath you, get in another line of work. Your job is caring for a child via working in someone's home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:pp you are utterly confused if you think you are not "the help". you are the help. Regardless of all the bs "I am family" they are so nice to me yadda yadda yadda, at the end of the day, you are paid to do a job, therefore you exchange "help" for money, just like a housekeeper which I am assuming you would refer to as "the help". I hate nannies that think they are above other people!!!!!!!!!!
Youre missing some pretty obvious social and historic context behind the phrase "the help" here. Don't get all snarky if you don't know what you're talking about. There is a HUGE difference between being a household employee who does her duties and being the help and getting completely taken advantage of.