Anonymous wrote:Giving up having a life of my own in order to facilitate other people's lives.
I realize that is the way it is with any full time job, but . . . . Like, at the end of the day, their pets have been taken care of (by me) but when I get home, my own pets have not been taken care of and I need to take care of them as well. My employers kitchen is tidy when I leave at the end of the day, and sometimes dinner is going in the crockpot. I get home to my house and my kitchen needs to be cleaned up and dinner prepared. Etc. Etc. I have very little time for conversations with my own friends and family.
So I race through with the responsibilities of my own life. So I don't have much of a life of my own. Because I am facilitating their lives. I often know what is going on with their extended family more than I know what is going on with my own extended family.
Anonymous wrote:I hate everything about my weekend nanny job (yes, I have posted about it before - sorry!) I am staying until the end of the year and feel nothing but dread from now until I drive home on Sunday night. Seriously, except for the money, I hate everything about it.
But I love my weekday nanny job! There is honestly not one thing that I even dislike about it. Amazing charge, wonderful employers, benefits, good pay, freedom, appreciation - seriously, everything any nanny could ever want!
Anonymous wrote:I have 2 charges,one of them is a high maintance child and to make matters worse she doesn't nap all day..I keep her entertained at all times otherwise she cries when I stand up.we go out to baby related activities everyday, playgrounds,long walks this child will not nap, I have given up eating lunch a long time ago! It's not possible I feel drained at the end of the day.I'm really beginning to hate coming to work to her..her parents are sweet but it's becoming a nightmare..also I hate my job when parents work from home, my families do that a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What did some of you expect your job to involve?
Please stop. Everyone in every profession dislikes something about their job. In just this one thread, please let the nannies speak freely.
Stop what? It was a question and I am nanny speaking freely so not sure what your issue is
Stop posting. All jobs have aspects that an individual can hate. Let the nannies have their thread without your comments. Please.
So as a nanny I'm not entitled to say anythingI never said there aren't aspects of the job people can dislike/hate I just wondered what people had expected in the beginning? I have been in the position where the family have outlayed my responsibilities in the beginning and then they end up expecting you to do something else! My question is reasonable maybe you're just ignorant
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate being a nanny on nights like tonight when I can't sleep and know I have to chase a 20 month old around for 9.5 hours tomorrow in the heat. Ugh...
Same. I also agree with the other nanny about vacation. I have 2 weeks and parent think they're being oh so generous. My friends go outbid the country every other month.
One day I'll get there.
What do your friends do for a living that that they get to travel internationally every other month? Are they Instagram stars?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny thing is it's usually the MB who views the nanny as competition not the other way around. I can't tell you how many times I've tried to form a team with parents with the children's best interest at mutual heart only to find that it's all well and good as long as I'm the one who wipes the floor. Everytime.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have my degree in Early Childhood Education from a top 20 university. I hate having to get on my hands and knees to clean up the floor under the high chair. I understand that not dropping food is a learning process but I hate having to clean it up.
Sorry to jump in since I'm not a nanny, but yikes. I have a PhD from the second ranked university in the world. I don't mind wiping the floor, cleaning the bathroom, etc. It's necessary for the bigger goals I have, i.e. it's a matter of context.
What I hate is having the nanny think of me as competition when we should be one team, working together in a loving but also organized and disciplined way to raise a child to be a good person and eventually a contributing member of society.
-MB
I'm the PP MB. Call me!I frequently wipe the floor on my knees while the nanny holds my kid in the mornings. I don't think it's her job exclusively to clean up my kids messes and vice versa.
To the snarky PP and the "you told her" crowd... I certainly didn't get anywhere in life by keeping quiet.I'm the PP you responded to and I hope you didn't feel that I was being snarky. And I have absolutely no problem cleaning up after my charges. Or cooking for them. Or changing their diapers or cleaning up their vomit or any of those things. The best jobs I have had were the ones were my employers viewed me as an equal and part of team. I think I was just trying to say that it is much more common for a nanny to have to navigate mommy guilt than the other way around. Good nannies don't try to compete with parents for their child's affection. It is futile and not good for the child. Good nannies have their charges best interests at heart and that extends to the family they work for. You know how hard it is to parent? Imagine having your MIL as your parenting boss and you cannot challenge her in any way shape or form. That's what it's like being a nanny sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Funny thing is it's usually the MB who views the nanny as competition not the other way around. I can't tell you how many times I've tried to form a team with parents with the children's best interest at mutual heart only to find that it's all well and good as long as I'm the one who wipes the floor. Everytime.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have my degree in Early Childhood Education from a top 20 university. I hate having to get on my hands and knees to clean up the floor under the high chair. I understand that not dropping food is a learning process but I hate having to clean it up.
Sorry to jump in since I'm not a nanny, but yikes. I have a PhD from the second ranked university in the world. I don't mind wiping the floor, cleaning the bathroom, etc. It's necessary for the bigger goals I have, i.e. it's a matter of context.
What I hate is having the nanny think of me as competition when we should be one team, working together in a loving but also organized and disciplined way to raise a child to be a good person and eventually a contributing member of society.
-MB
I'm the PP MB. Call me!I frequently wipe the floor on my knees while the nanny holds my kid in the mornings. I don't think it's her job exclusively to clean up my kids messes and vice versa.
To the snarky PP and the "you told her" crowd... I certainly didn't get anywhere in life by keeping quiet.I'm the PP you responded to and I hope you didn't feel that I was being snarky. And I have absolutely no problem cleaning up after my charges. Or cooking for them. Or changing their diapers or cleaning up their vomit or any of those things. The best jobs I have had were the ones were my employers viewed me as an equal and part of team. I think I was just trying to say that it is much more common for a nanny to have to navigate mommy guilt than the other way around. Good nannies don't try to compete with parents for their child's affection. It is futile and not good for the child. Good nannies have their charges best interests at heart and that extends to the family they work for. You know how hard it is to parent? Imagine having your MIL as your parenting boss and you cannot challenge her in any way shape or form. That's what it's like being a nanny sometimes.