Anonymous wrote:Our son is 2.5, and we have had our nanny full-time since he was 5 months. She is wonderful, reliable, and our son loves her dearly. Unfortunately, there aren't a lot of children in our immediate neighborhood, so we are planning to put him in a part-time pre school (3 hours/day, 3 days/week) in the fall. We'll still need our nanny to work full-time, because we won't be home to take him to school or drop him off, put him down for a nap, etc. But our nanny will have a significant amount of down time - 9 hours out of a 44-hour work week. Additionally, after school, she will feed him and put him down for a nap - another 2-3 hours of down time. She's not great at cooking or cleaning, so we really can't have her do that while we're gone. Our income isn't huge, so we feel weird to pay that much money for so much down time. Our only other option would be full-time daycare, which is not ideal due to sicknesses, the time spent dropping off and picking up, etc. But we really want him to be around other kids at least a few days a week.
Has anyone else dealt with this situation at 2-3 years old? How did you handle it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having an income that is not "huge" is not the same thing as not being able to afford a nanny. You need to work on reading comprehension.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people that can't actually afford the luxury of a nanny even have them? If you are worried about money so badly put him in preschool, find someone part time, and then when he gets sick or school is closed for holidays, TWD, conferences etc just take off of work yourself and stay home with your child. And if you don't want to pay her for he time don't dare put her on the list for emergency contacts at the school or expect her to have her phone on in case something happens like he starts running a fever while there. They can just call you at work and you can leave early and take him home to nurse him back to health or lay down at your job.
Where in the original post say that they can't afford a nanny? Also, judgy much?
"Our income isn't huge, so we feel weird paying for so much down time..."
This is stated in the op. What is feeling weird? As if paying someone for caring for their child isn't worth the pay after that person has been with them for a while. Yes I am judging. If you can't afford a nanny then don't have one. Just put your child in daycare and miss work when your child gets sick. have someone part time to pick them up. But it's a very entitled mind frame to think its ok to pay your nanny back by reducing her pay but still wanting her to work for you or be available "just in case".
Do you understand the context of the posts??? Why mention it? They want to nickel and dime where a lot of families wouldnt think twice because they aren't concerned about downtime and feeling "weird" about something. They obviously want to be cheapskates. Have their cake and eat it too. Punish the nanny because they want to put a child in school before it is really developmentally necessary then worry about paying someone because they feel the person is not "working" enough. Hope the nanny finds a family that understands she needs to support herself also and won't try to down her pay. Op will realize the mistake she has made soon enough. Just wait till the child gets exposed to all of the foreign germs in daycare as they get acclimated and need to be picked up here and there due to illness. We'lol see how she feels about nickeling and diming this "downtime" then
It's good that you are not in a job that requires critical thinking and attention to detail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having an income that is not "huge" is not the same thing as not being able to afford a nanny. You need to work on reading comprehension.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people that can't actually afford the luxury of a nanny even have them? If you are worried about money so badly put him in preschool, find someone part time, and then when he gets sick or school is closed for holidays, TWD, conferences etc just take off of work yourself and stay home with your child. And if you don't want to pay her for he time don't dare put her on the list for emergency contacts at the school or expect her to have her phone on in case something happens like he starts running a fever while there. They can just call you at work and you can leave early and take him home to nurse him back to health or lay down at your job.
Where in the original post say that they can't afford a nanny? Also, judgy much?
"Our income isn't huge, so we feel weird paying for so much down time..."
This is stated in the op. What is feeling weird? As if paying someone for caring for their child isn't worth the pay after that person has been with them for a while. Yes I am judging. If you can't afford a nanny then don't have one. Just put your child in daycare and miss work when your child gets sick. have someone part time to pick them up. But it's a very entitled mind frame to think its ok to pay your nanny back by reducing her pay but still wanting her to work for you or be available "just in case".
Do you understand the context of the posts??? Why mention it? They want to nickel and dime where a lot of families wouldnt think twice because they aren't concerned about downtime and feeling "weird" about something. They obviously want to be cheapskates. Have their cake and eat it too. Punish the nanny because they want to put a child in school before it is really developmentally necessary then worry about paying someone because they feel the person is not "working" enough. Hope the nanny finds a family that understands she needs to support herself also and won't try to down her pay. Op will realize the mistake she has made soon enough. Just wait till the child gets exposed to all of the foreign germs in daycare as they get acclimated and need to be picked up here and there due to illness. We'lol see how she feels about nickeling and diming this "downtime" then
It's good that you are not in a job that requires critical thinking and attention to detail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having an income that is not "huge" is not the same thing as not being able to afford a nanny. You need to work on reading comprehension.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people that can't actually afford the luxury of a nanny even have them? If you are worried about money so badly put him in preschool, find someone part time, and then when he gets sick or school is closed for holidays, TWD, conferences etc just take off of work yourself and stay home with your child. And if you don't want to pay her for he time don't dare put her on the list for emergency contacts at the school or expect her to have her phone on in case something happens like he starts running a fever while there. They can just call you at work and you can leave early and take him home to nurse him back to health or lay down at your job.
Where in the original post say that they can't afford a nanny? Also, judgy much?
"Our income isn't huge, so we feel weird paying for so much down time..."
This is stated in the op. What is feeling weird? As if paying someone for caring for their child isn't worth the pay after that person has been with them for a while. Yes I am judging. If you can't afford a nanny then don't have one. Just put your child in daycare and miss work when your child gets sick. have someone part time to pick them up. But it's a very entitled mind frame to think its ok to pay your nanny back by reducing her pay but still wanting her to work for you or be available "just in case".
Do you understand the context of the posts??? Why mention it? They want to nickel and dime where a lot of families wouldnt think twice because they aren't concerned about downtime and feeling "weird" about something. They obviously want to be cheapskates. Have their cake and eat it too. Punish the nanny because they want to put a child in school before it is really developmentally necessary then worry about paying someone because they feel the person is not "working" enough. Hope the nanny finds a family that understands she needs to support herself also and won't try to down her pay. Op will realize the mistake she has made soon enough. Just wait till the child gets exposed to all of the foreign germs in daycare as they get acclimated and need to be picked up here and there due to illness. We'lol see how she feels about nickeling and diming this "downtime" then
Anonymous wrote:Having an income that is not "huge" is not the same thing as not being able to afford a nanny. You need to work on reading comprehension.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people that can't actually afford the luxury of a nanny even have them? If you are worried about money so badly put him in preschool, find someone part time, and then when he gets sick or school is closed for holidays, TWD, conferences etc just take off of work yourself and stay home with your child. And if you don't want to pay her for he time don't dare put her on the list for emergency contacts at the school or expect her to have her phone on in case something happens like he starts running a fever while there. They can just call you at work and you can leave early and take him home to nurse him back to health or lay down at your job.
Where in the original post say that they can't afford a nanny? Also, judgy much?
"Our income isn't huge, so we feel weird paying for so much down time..."
This is stated in the op. What is feeling weird? As if paying someone for caring for their child isn't worth the pay after that person has been with them for a while. Yes I am judging. If you can't afford a nanny then don't have one. Just put your child in daycare and miss work when your child gets sick. have someone part time to pick them up. But it's a very entitled mind frame to think its ok to pay your nanny back by reducing her pay but still wanting her to work for you or be available "just in case".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people that can't actually afford the luxury of a nanny even have them? If you are worried about money so badly put him in preschool, find someone part time, and then when he gets sick or school is closed for holidays, TWD, conferences etc just take off of work yourself and stay home with your child. And if you don't want to pay her for he time don't dare put her on the list for emergency contacts at the school or expect her to have her phone on in case something happens like he starts running a fever while there. They can just call you at work and you can leave early and take him home to nurse him back to health or lay down at your job.
Where in the original post say that they can't afford a nanny? Also, judgy much?
"Our income isn't huge, so we feel weird paying for so much down time..."
This is stated in the op. What is feeling weird? As if paying someone for caring for their child isn't worth the pay after that person has been with them for a while. Yes I am judging. If you can't afford a nanny then don't have one. Just put your child in daycare and miss work when your child gets sick. have someone part time to pick them up. But it's a very entitled mind frame to think its ok to pay your nanny back by reducing her pay but still wanting her to work for you or be available "just in case".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son is 2.5, and we have had our nanny full-time since he was 5 months. She is wonderful, reliable, and our son loves her dearly. Unfortunately, there aren't a lot of children in our immediate neighborhood, so we are planning to put him in a part-time pre school (3 hours/day, 3 days/week) in the fall. We'll still need our nanny to work full-time, because we won't be home to take him to school or drop him off, put him down for a nap, etc. But our nanny will have a significant amount of down time - 9 hours out of a 44-hour work week. Additionally, after school, she will feed him and put him down for a nap - another 2-3 hours of down time. She's not great at cooking or cleaning, so we really can't have her do that while we're gone. Our income isn't huge, so we feel weird to pay that much money for so much down time. Our only other option would be full-time daycare, which is not ideal due to sicknesses, the time spent dropping off and picking up, etc. But we really want him to be around other kids at least a few days a week.
Has anyone else dealt with this situation at 2-3 years old? How did you handle it?
You do what's best for maintaining stability for your child, not your bank accounts... Unless you're in serious financial trouble, which I don't think is the case here. Correct?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people that can't actually afford the luxury of a nanny even have them? If you are worried about money so badly put him in preschool, find someone part time, and then when he gets sick or school is closed for holidays, TWD, conferences etc just take off of work yourself and stay home with your child. And if you don't want to pay her for he time don't dare put her on the list for emergency contacts at the school or expect her to have her phone on in case something happens like he starts running a fever while there. They can just call you at work and you can leave early and take him home to nurse him back to health or lay down at your job.
Where in the original post say that they can't afford a nanny? Also, judgy much?
Anonymous wrote:Our son is 2.5, and we have had our nanny full-time since he was 5 months. She is wonderful, reliable, and our son loves her dearly. Unfortunately, there aren't a lot of children in our immediate neighborhood, so we are planning to put him in a part-time pre school (3 hours/day, 3 days/week) in the fall. We'll still need our nanny to work full-time, because we won't be home to take him to school or drop him off, put him down for a nap, etc. But our nanny will have a significant amount of down time - 9 hours out of a 44-hour work week. Additionally, after school, she will feed him and put him down for a nap - another 2-3 hours of down time. She's not great at cooking or cleaning, so we really can't have her do that while we're gone. Our income isn't huge, so we feel weird to pay that much money for so much down time. Our only other option would be full-time daycare, which is not ideal due to sicknesses, the time spent dropping off and picking up, etc. But we really want him to be around other kids at least a few days a week.
Has anyone else dealt with this situation at 2-3 years old? How did you handle it?
Anonymous wrote:Why do people that can't actually afford the luxury of a nanny even have them? If you are worried about money so badly put him in preschool, find someone part time, and then when he gets sick or school is closed for holidays, TWD, conferences etc just take off of work yourself and stay home with your child. And if you don't want to pay her for he time don't dare put her on the list for emergency contacts at the school or expect her to have her phone on in case something happens like he starts running a fever while there. They can just call you at work and you can leave early and take him home to nurse him back to health or lay down at your job.