Anonymous wrote:How can she have 1.5 data off if she’s stuck at your weekend house? Are you giving her off Monday and half of Tuesday to look after your own kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are wrong about one thing here, you can't force her to come to your weekend home just to come help on Sunday nights (or other hours). She doesn't get to spend her time off as she pleases if she's there, you have to understand that as well.
You enjoy your weekend home but would you if you were a 20 yo Au Pair?
What can't you handle by yourself on a Sunday night that would absolutely require her help?
You should have a reset conversation about her if she does the bare minimum and address what she can do better but you have to be respectful of her time off.
I'd find a way to ask her to come once in a while and really help you on these weekends so you and your husband can enjoy some down time.
You were super nice to have her family over and she should accept to give back as well. But she can't be forced.
She's the kind of Au Pair who apparently doesn't want to spend time with your family.
That's sad.
I am a former Au Pair and my host family never included me in anything, they were not interested in that part of the programme, I was just there "to work". I had to accept it and move on.
I am not forcing her to spend her weekends off at our house - I would be scheduling her to work part of the weekends (likely
Saturday evening so dh and I can go out), since she can have other times off. Our previous au pairs loved going there because it is relaxing, and we also often let them invite friends up for the weekend. We specified before matching that we expect ap to come up some weekends. I don’t think I am being unreasonable to ask her to come up 1-2 weekends per month. But apparently she already has other plans. Do I make her come anyway?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is working weekdays, not weekends. If you want weekends, you need to tell her the schedule is changing and she will need to work weekends and give her the time off weekends. Why do you need her when you are going skiing? She works every evening and deserves some time off to be with her friends. Are you even offering to fully pay for it and get her her own room?
We’ve done a mix of giving off a full weekday on the weekends we have her actually work on the weekend, or just having her come and she isn’t working but she chooses to be there. She has her own bedroom in our country house and we fully pay for the skiing. Our previous au pairs have all been skiers but she isn’t, which is something she wasn’t totally up front about when we matched (she said she likes to ski but then told us after she doesn’t really like it plus she gets cold very easily and has an undisclosed medical condition related to cold). We told her she doesn’t have to ski and she’s welcome to hang out at the house (we have a hot tubs & lots of activities), and invite a friend if she wants (who we would drive up with us...). The only thing we’d ever “need” her for is Saturday evening babysitting, which we can do without of course. It’s more that ski weekends are a big part of our family life and she’s completely missing out on them.
She knew she was working until 8-8:30 every evening before matching. She still goes out many nights after (most ap’s in our area work until around then it seems), and she rarely works mornings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks. I’m going to try to talk with her tomorrow, after her friend leaves. That is, if she agrees to stay home after bedtime, since many nights she goes out.
She works 1-2 mornings/days a week plus all night. When else does she go out except after your kids are asleep.
Anonymous wrote:She is working weekdays, not weekends. If you want weekends, you need to tell her the schedule is changing and she will need to work weekends and give her the time off weekends. Why do you need her when you are going skiing? She works every evening and deserves some time off to be with her friends. Are you even offering to fully pay for it and get her her own room?
Anonymous wrote:Thanks. I’m going to try to talk with her tomorrow, after her friend leaves. That is, if she agrees to stay home after bedtime, since many nights she goes out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - its a tough situation. My only caution is that it seems like you are frustrated she can't help out these upcoming weekends, and that frustration is leaking into things like her other work has slipped. Make sure you are not starting a conversation that could end in a break/rematch without careful consideration, and take a pause before doing so. You may decide its not worth it.
Try to find some local mountain babysitters or an older teen neighborhood babysitter who would like to join you in the mountains!
I actually wanted to do a reset before the holidays, but decided to see if she stepped up a bit after a long break. I asked her to do a few small kid-related tasks, sorting socks and tidying up books etc in kids rooms. She did some of it but not a thorough job on either. This week her friend is “hanging out” and ap has disappeared a few times when she’s supposed to be working, and comes back 20-30 mins later with no explanation other than “I went to my room”. My house is so much messier than it was with prior au pairs because she either doesn’t make the kids tidy up or she doesn’t do it, despite my making it very clear that it is her job. She will do things like leave any breakfast dishes she think might possibly have been used by me or dh in the sink, but wash the others (despite the fact that dh and I only drink coffee or tea in the mornings at home, and almost always put our own cups in the dishwasher). I’ve spoken about it with her before but it’s starting to get draining. This all happened before the weekend conversation, and I didn’t press them because the kids were around and I’d prefer to talk with her solo.
Also, dh is going to be away for 3 weeks next month and even knowing that she told me she “must” take a long weekend class on the first weekend he is away, meaning she won’t be able to go to the country with us the first week in February either...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - its a tough situation. My only caution is that it seems like you are frustrated she can't help out these upcoming weekends, and that frustration is leaking into things like her other work has slipped. Make sure you are not starting a conversation that could end in a break/rematch without careful consideration, and take a pause before doing so. You may decide its not worth it.
Try to find some local mountain babysitters or an older teen neighborhood babysitter who would like to join you in the mountains!
I actually wanted to do a reset before the holidays, but decided to see if she stepped up a bit after a long break. I asked her to do a few small kid-related tasks, sorting socks and tidying up books etc in kids rooms. She did some of it but not a thorough job on either. This week her friend is “hanging out” and ap has disappeared a few times when she’s supposed to be working, and comes back 20-30 mins later with no explanation other than “I went to my room”. My house is so much messier than it was with prior au pairs because she either doesn’t make the kids tidy up or she doesn’t do it, despite my making it very clear that it is her job. She will do things like leave any breakfast dishes she think might possibly have been used by me or dh in the sink, but wash the others (despite the fact that dh and I only drink coffee or tea in the mornings at home, and almost always put our own cups in the dishwasher). I’ve spoken about it with her before but it’s starting to get draining. This all happened before the weekend conversation, and I didn’t press them because the kids were around and I’d prefer to talk with her solo.
Also, dh is going to be away for 3 weeks next month and even knowing that she told me she “must” take a long weekend class on the first weekend he is away, meaning she won’t be able to go to the country with us the first week in February either...