Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The nature of a job is paying someone else to do thing you don't have the time, desire, or ability to do. Welcome to the working world.
I'm a MB, and I will bite. I have a nanny for many more hours than I work (I work very part time). Here is why. Without a nanny, I do not have the
1. Time: to spend one-on-one time with all four children every day. Cook a dinner which takes an hour. Go to appointments. Exercise. Nap if the baby was up all night.
2. Desire: to play kid games like Candyland. Go to the park and swing, and swing, and swing. Go to every week of Music Together, or My Gym. Drive, drive, drive.
3. Ability: to give baths (I can, but I have a bad back, and I specifically hired a nanny to take this chore off my plate. I cannot bend over for even the short time it takes to bathe a toddler without a lot of pain). to come up with "fun" motivations for cleaning or other "have-to-dos." My nanny has an ECE degree; she has lots of ideas for activities I would never come up with.
So basically you have outsourced almost the entirety of motherhood to the lowest bidder? Interesting.
LOL thats all i could think to reading that so sad
Really? All you do all day is play Candyland, swing, give baths, and drive? We do a lot more here.
I would say 1) spending one on one time with your children, 2) cooking dinner for your family, 3) taking your children to doctors appointments, 4) playing games 5) going to the park, 6) pushing your kids on a swing, 7) give them baths, 8) take them to music and gym classes .... seems like 95% of parenting to me. But hey, as long as she gets home and remembers to go into their room and give them a kiss as they sleep, and if she has time to leave them an "I love you note" at the breakfast table for when they wake up since they never see her then I guess she is a good mother!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The nature of a job is paying someone else to do thing you don't have the time, desire, or ability to do. Welcome to the working world.
I'm a MB, and I will bite. I have a nanny for many more hours than I work (I work very part time). Here is why. Without a nanny, I do not have the
1. Time: to spend one-on-one time with all four children every day. Cook a dinner which takes an hour. Go to appointments. Exercise. Nap if the baby was up all night.
2. Desire: to play kid games like Candyland. Go to the park and swing, and swing, and swing. Go to every week of Music Together, or My Gym. Drive, drive, drive.
3. Ability: to give baths (I can, but I have a bad back, and I specifically hired a nanny to take this chore off my plate. I cannot bend over for even the short time it takes to bathe a toddler without a lot of pain). to come up with "fun" motivations for cleaning or other "have-to-dos." My nanny has an ECE degree; she has lots of ideas for activities I would never come up with.
So basically you have outsourced almost the entirety of motherhood to the lowest bidder? Interesting.
LOL thats all i could think to reading that so sad
Really? All you do all day is play Candyland, swing, give baths, and drive? We do a lot more here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The nature of a job is paying someone else to do thing you don't have the time, desire, or ability to do. Welcome to the working world.
I'm a MB, and I will bite. I have a nanny for many more hours than I work (I work very part time). Here is why. Without a nanny, I do not have the
1. Time: to spend one-on-one time with all four children every day. Cook a dinner which takes an hour. Go to appointments. Exercise. Nap if the baby was up all night.
2. Desire: to play kid games like Candyland. Go to the park and swing, and swing, and swing. Go to every week of Music Together, or My Gym. Drive, drive, drive.
3. Ability: to give baths (I can, but I have a bad back, and I specifically hired a nanny to take this chore off my plate. I cannot bend over for even the short time it takes to bathe a toddler without a lot of pain). to come up with "fun" motivations for cleaning or other "have-to-dos." My nanny has an ECE degree; she has lots of ideas for activities I would never come up with.
So basically you have outsourced almost the entirety of motherhood to the lowest bidder? Interesting.
LOL thats all i could think to reading that so sad
Anonymous wrote:Boy OP, you sure are a trooper (no pun intended here) for walking four miles a day taking your charge to his activities.
I would be livid, even more so knowing that his mother doesn't even do that! If she wants you to take her son to a daytime activity AND it is two miles away, then she should allow you to drive there. Most especially since she does.
I think it is hypocritical of her to ask you to do things that she knows are not easy to do alone. I wouldn't take this as a compliment, I would take it as an insult. It's like she acknowledges these things are hard to do, but since you are a nanny, you shouldn't complain about doing them since you are just "a nanny." And she can ask you to do anything + either you comply or lose your job.
Since you are not interested in quitting, then there really is nothing else I can say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The nature of a job is paying someone else to do thing you don't have the time, desire, or ability to do. Welcome to the working world.
I'm a MB, and I will bite. I have a nanny for many more hours than I work (I work very part time). Here is why. Without a nanny, I do not have the
1. Time: to spend one-on-one time with all four children every day. Cook a dinner which takes an hour. Go to appointments. Exercise. Nap if the baby was up all night.
2. Desire: to play kid games like Candyland. Go to the park and swing, and swing, and swing. Go to every week of Music Together, or My Gym. Drive, drive, drive.
3. Ability: to give baths (I can, but I have a bad back, and I specifically hired a nanny to take this chore off my plate. I cannot bend over for even the short time it takes to bathe a toddler without a lot of pain). to come up with "fun" motivations for cleaning or other "have-to-dos." My nanny has an ECE degree; she has lots of ideas for activities I would never come up with.
So basically you have outsourced almost the entirety of motherhood to the lowest bidder? Interesting.
LOL thats all i could think to reading that so sad
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The nature of a job is paying someone else to do thing you don't have the time, desire, or ability to do. Welcome to the working world.
I'm a MB, and I will bite. I have a nanny for many more hours than I work (I work very part time). Here is why. Without a nanny, I do not have the
1. Time: to spend one-on-one time with all four children every day. Cook a dinner which takes an hour. Go to appointments. Exercise. Nap if the baby was up all night.
2. Desire: to play kid games like Candyland. Go to the park and swing, and swing, and swing. Go to every week of Music Together, or My Gym. Drive, drive, drive.
3. Ability: to give baths (I can, but I have a bad back, and I specifically hired a nanny to take this chore off my plate. I cannot bend over for even the short time it takes to bathe a toddler without a lot of pain). to come up with "fun" motivations for cleaning or other "have-to-dos." My nanny has an ECE degree; she has lots of ideas for activities I would never come up with.
So basically you have outsourced almost the entirety of motherhood to the lowest bidder? Interesting.
Anonymous wrote:Boy OP, you sure are a trooper (no pun intended here) for walking four miles a day taking your charge to his activities.
I would be livid, even more so knowing that his mother doesn't even do that! If she wants you to take her son to a daytime activity AND it is two miles away, then she should allow you to drive there. Most especially since she does.
I think it is hypocritical of her to ask you to do things that she knows are not easy to do alone. I wouldn't take this as a compliment, I would take it as an insult. It's like she acknowledges these things are hard to do, but since you are a nanny, you shouldn't complain about doing them since you are just "a nanny." And she can ask you to do anything + either you comply or lose your job.
Since you are not interested in quitting, then there really is nothing else I can say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The nature of a job is paying someone else to do thing you don't have the time, desire, or ability to do. Welcome to the working world.
I'm a MB, and I will bite. I have a nanny for many more hours than I work (I work very part time). Here is why. Without a nanny, I do not have the
1. Time: to spend one-on-one time with all four children every day. Cook a dinner which takes an hour. Go to appointments. Exercise. Nap if the baby was up all night.
2. Desire: to play kid games like Candyland. Go to the park and swing, and swing, and swing. Go to every week of Music Together, or My Gym. Drive, drive, drive.
3. Ability: to give baths (I can, but I have a bad back, and I specifically hired a nanny to take this chore off my plate. I cannot bend over for even the short time it takes to bathe a toddler without a lot of pain). to come up with "fun" motivations for cleaning or other "have-to-dos." My nanny has an ECE degree; she has lots of ideas for activities I would never come up with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The nature of a job is paying someone else to do thing you don't have the time, desire, or ability to do. Welcome to the working world.
And which "working world" is this, PP? I have 23 people reporting to me and would never ask any of them to do something that I cannot, or have not, done.