Anonymous wrote:I have to agree. I've worked with some truly disadvantaged children and communities, worked overseas with Peace Corps, and volunteered with refugees, and nannying is the most relaxing job I've ever had. Even working at customer service was more stressful than handling a preschooler and toddler! Is it exhausting? Absolutely. But not even close, and definitely not more so, than a lot of other jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The above poster is right. How many jobs make you responsible for the life and well-being of another human being?
A cop
A firefighter
A paramedic
A surgeon
What else?
Teachers. Or have you forgotten the reality of school shootings?
Nurses. Or maybe you lumped them under paramedics.
Other doctors. Or are all doctors surgeons in your world?
School bus drivers.
Sports coaches. Children can and do die at athletic practices, coaches need to know how much to ask of their players and how to respond to distress.
Security guard. They aren't all cops, honey.
Child advocate, social worker, any attorney working on child abuse or neglect cases...
Do you want me to continue?
Anonymous wrote:The above poster is right. How many jobs make you responsible for the life and well-being of another human being?
A cop
A firefighter
A paramedic
A surgeon
What else?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a nanny is only stressful and isolating if you are doing it right. Seriously, how many nannies do you see out there "doing it right"?
Does "doing it right" mean we care about doing the highest quality of work?
Those who don't care about the children aren't nannies.
They're fly-by-night sitters, not nannies.
Too bad if parents refuse to understand the difference.
Yes. And from what I have seen most nannies don't care about doing "the highest quality of work" and too bad for them refusing to understand the difference. Nannies constantly on their phones, nannies who don't know or understand developmental stages, nannies who never talk, read or engage their charges (or who can't because they don't speak English). Sitting on your phone in the park while your charges run around bugging good nannies and parents to pay attention to them is not stressful.
If you find playing with your charge stressful, being a nanny is NOT for you.
I'm a nanny and don't even have a data plan on my phone, so there is no "being on my phone" ever. I nanny two lovely kids, a toddler and a preschooler. Nothing stressful about my day. Sure they fight sometimes, but they are loving children and I've known both of them since birth. I have them on a great routine that allows me about 2hrs a day completely to myself.I get to be outside, often go fruit and vegetable picking at local farms and plan all kinds of fun activities outside of the house.
How is this stressful again?
You are responsible for the life of a child. It is not an office job where if you don't pay attention you could lose a report. When a nanny doesn't doesn't pay attention a child can die. A toddler can run into the street in four seconds flat. A sudden spike in a fever can lead to a febrile seizure and permanent brain damage in a baby. A child can choke while eating (the DC nanny who watched her charge die in front of her in spite of performing CPR). I find the enormous responsibility of caring for a child stressful - as I should.
As a nanny, your job is more than playing with your charge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a nanny is only stressful and isolating if you are doing it right. Seriously, how many nannies do you see out there "doing it right"?
Does "doing it right" mean we care about doing the highest quality of work?
Those who don't care about the children aren't nannies.
They're fly-by-night sitters, not nannies.
Too bad if parents refuse to understand the difference.
Yes. And from what I have seen most nannies don't care about doing "the highest quality of work" and too bad for them refusing to understand the difference. Nannies constantly on their phones, nannies who don't know or understand developmental stages, nannies who never talk, read or engage their charges (or who can't because they don't speak English). Sitting on your phone in the park while your charges run around bugging good nannies and parents to pay attention to them is not stressful.
If you find playing with your charge stressful, being a nanny is NOT for you.
I'm a nanny and don't even have a data plan on my phone, so there is no "being on my phone" ever. I nanny two lovely kids, a toddler and a preschooler. Nothing stressful about my day. Sure they fight sometimes, but they are loving children and I've known both of them since birth. I have them on a great routine that allows me about 2hrs a day completely to myself.I get to be outside, often go fruit and vegetable picking at local farms and plan all kinds of fun activities outside of the house.
How is this stressful again?
You are responsible for the life of a child. It is not an office job where if you don't pay attention you could lose a report. When a nanny doesn't doesn't pay attention a child can die. A toddler can run into the street in four seconds flat. A sudden spike in a fever can lead to a febrile seizure and permanent brain damage in a baby. A child can choke while eating (the DC nanny who watched her charge die in front of her in spite of performing CPR). I find the enormous responsibility of caring for a child stressful - as I should.
As a nanny, your job is more than playing with your charge.
Well said, thank you.
Good nannies and intelligent parents understand this.
They also understand the undesirable consequences of non-child related stress and the importance of avoiding/reducing it. Frequent parent-nanny communication is key. Every attentive parent should carve out the time for routine meetings with the nanny, and encourage (and model) open and honest communication, even when it's hard or unpleasant. One can always be respectful.
-OP
+1,000,000 The rest of your posters are idiots. No one said it was the most stressful job in the world but stress is stress. Very different to have the lives of children in your hands than to mess up a Starbucks order or forget to sign a report.
Those who take it lightly are horrible nannies and mothers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being a nanny is only stressful and isolating if you are doing it right. Seriously, how many nannies do you see out there "doing it right"?
Does "doing it right" mean we care about doing the highest quality of work?
Those who don't care about the children aren't nannies.
They're fly-by-night sitters, not nannies.
Too bad if parents refuse to understand the difference.
Yes. And from what I have seen most nannies don't care about doing "the highest quality of work" and too bad for them refusing to understand the difference. Nannies constantly on their phones, nannies who don't know or understand developmental stages, nannies who never talk, read or engage their charges (or who can't because they don't speak English). Sitting on your phone in the park while your charges run around bugging good nannies and parents to pay attention to them is not stressful.
If you find playing with your charge stressful, being a nanny is NOT for you.
I'm a nanny and don't even have a data plan on my phone, so there is no "being on my phone" ever. I nanny two lovely kids, a toddler and a preschooler. Nothing stressful about my day. Sure they fight sometimes, but they are loving children and I've known both of them since birth. I have them on a great routine that allows me about 2hrs a day completely to myself.I get to be outside, often go fruit and vegetable picking at local farms and plan all kinds of fun activities outside of the house.
How is this stressful again?
You are responsible for the life of a child. It is not an office job where if you don't pay attention you could lose a report. When a nanny doesn't doesn't pay attention a child can die. A toddler can run into the street in four seconds flat. A sudden spike in a fever can lead to a febrile seizure and permanent brain damage in a baby. A child can choke while eating (the DC nanny who watched her charge die in front of her in spite of performing CPR). I find the enormous responsibility of caring for a child stressful - as I should.
As a nanny, your job is more than playing with your charge.
Well said, thank you.
Good nannies and intelligent parents understand this.
They also understand the undesirable consequences of non-child related stress and the importance of avoiding/reducing it. Frequent parent-nanny communication is key. Every attentive parent should carve out the time for routine meetings with the nanny, and encourage (and model) open and honest communication, even when it's hard or unpleasant. One can always be respectful.
-OP