Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The real question, OP, is how many "breaks" do you take over the weekend, when nanny isn't there. Or do you have a weekend nanny to?
That is really irrelevent. OP is not the one being paid for every hour. it is up to her what she does
Taking care of your child IS a job, no matter if you're the bioparent, or the hired help, or something inbetween.
The job should ALWAYS be done in the best way possible, whoever is doing it.
Never thought of taking care of my child as a job! although I do it in the best way possible as determined by me (her mother)!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone is a bit of a micromanager. Are you for real?!?
Micromanagement would be to require the nanny to do certain chores at certain times of day and then report back to MB daily with a list of everything she got done. Limiting the amount of time a nanny spends watching tv and otherwise enjoying personal time on the job is called management. I know the idea of having a manager and being accountable for how you spend your work hours is tough for some of you nannies to grasp, but that is how the work world works.
Anonymous wrote:Someone is a bit of a micromanager. Are you for real?!?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the PP who said that the nanny should get a one hour break while the child is asleep, and perhaps another 15 minute break if the child takes two naps. If the child naps more than that, the nanny should be doing other things around the house--not heavy cleaning, but tidying up, cooking, managing the dishwasher, laundry, planning activities or kid meals, keeping an online photojournal of her time with the kids, etc. She should not be napping, watching tv, reading magazines or the like outside her 1 to 1.25 hours of breaks unless that was negotiated up front.
This just reads so...dumb...to me.
I do ALL of these things. Shall I list them? I keep an extremely detailed log of our day. I wash, dry, and fold the children's laundry. I prep all the baby food, portion it, refrigerate and freeze it. I pick up necessary groceries. I load, run, and empty the dishwasher (GASP of the parents' dishes too and GASP I don't mind). I vacuum everywhere but the parents' bedroom. I sanitize all toys and books. I keep the toy boxes in order on a DAILY basis. I wash the bathtub since I give all the baths. I wash, dry, and put away the cloth diapers. I sanitize the diaper pails. I consolidate and take out the trash and recycling from the entire house. I bring in the mail and any packages. I wipe off the kids' fingerprints from the windows. I could go on and on, but I won't. I do all of these things and today I STILL had over two hours with nothing to do. So yeah, okay PP, I guess I "shouldn't" be allowed to read my book during that time, I should what, stand at attention outside the children's bedroom? A nanny who gets everything in her contract done on time, who builds great rapport with the kids, who communicates well with parents, who knows the neighbors, arranges and hosts play dates, takes the kids to community activities, basically a nanny who DOES HER JOB WELL, should be allowed to enjoy any downtime she gets in her day. Tomorrow the kid's might only nap 45 minutes, which I'll use to get everything cleaned, tidied, cooked, put away, whatever, but maybe they'll nap three hours again and I'll have a long break. And that will me being lucky, not lazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the PP who said that the nanny should get a one hour break while the child is asleep, and perhaps another 15 minute break if the child takes two naps. If the child naps more than that, the nanny should be doing other things around the house--not heavy cleaning, but tidying up, cooking, managing the dishwasher, laundry, planning activities or kid meals, keeping an online photojournal of her time with the kids, etc. She should not be napping, watching tv, reading magazines or the like outside her 1 to 1.25 hours of breaks unless that was negotiated up front.
This just reads so...dumb...to me.
I do ALL of these things. Shall I list them? I keep an extremely detailed log of our day. I wash, dry, and fold the children's laundry. I prep all the baby food, portion it, refrigerate and freeze it. I pick up necessary groceries. I load, run, and empty the dishwasher (GASP of the parents' dishes too and GASP I don't mind). I vacuum everywhere but the parents' bedroom. I sanitize all toys and books. I keep the toy boxes in order on a DAILY basis. I wash the bathtub since I give all the baths. I wash, dry, and put away the cloth diapers. I sanitize the diaper pails. I consolidate and take out the trash and recycling from the entire house. I bring in the mail and any packages. I wipe off the kids' fingerprints from the windows. I could go on and on, but I won't. I do all of these things and today I STILL had over two hours with nothing to do. So yeah, okay PP, I guess I "shouldn't" be allowed to read my book during that time, I should what, stand at attention outside the children's bedroom? A nanny who gets everything in her contract done on time, who builds great rapport with the kids, who communicates well with parents, who knows the neighbors, arranges and hosts play dates, takes the kids to community activities, basically a nanny who DOES HER JOB WELL, should be allowed to enjoy any downtime she gets in her day. Tomorrow the kid's might only nap 45 minutes, which I'll use to get everything cleaned, tidied, cooked, put away, whatever, but maybe they'll nap three hours again and I'll have a long break. And that will me being lucky, not lazy.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with the PP who said that the nanny should get a one hour break while the child is asleep, and perhaps another 15 minute break if the child takes two naps. If the child naps more than that, the nanny should be doing other things around the house--not heavy cleaning, but tidying up, cooking, managing the dishwasher, laundry, planning activities or kid meals, keeping an online photojournal of her time with the kids, etc. She should not be napping, watching tv, reading magazines or the like outside her 1 to 1.25 hours of breaks unless that was negotiated up front.
Anonymous wrote:I too spend more time sitting around when the grandparents come to visit. Not because I am lazy but because I am aware that the grandparents flew thousands of miles to see their grand-kids and I don't want to interfere with their playing/bonding.
Anonymous wrote:I too spend more time sitting around when the grandparents come to visit. Not because I am lazy but because I am aware that the grandparents flew thousands of miles to see their grand-kids and I don't want to interfere with their playing/bonding.