Anonymous wrote:To each his own. I mean it. If you are happy with your job set up AWESOME! You really need to enjoy what you do! I know I do!
I LOVE being a "Nanny Maid", "Maid Nanny", "Maid Who Keeps Children Breathing", or whatever you want to label me! I'm super domestic so it works for me. I always offer light cleaning, set up the contract, and then I let loose on a house!
Each week during nap time I go down my list of "maid" duties and try to accomplish them each week.
Bathrooms (Kids and *GASP* parents bathroom) each week
Sweep hard floors and mop them
Sweep kitchen and entryway daily
Wipe down kitchen each day
Vacuum each week
Daily kids laundry
Dust (one thing I've always hated)
Clean up theater room
Clean toys
Organize toys
Donate toys
Organize kids closets
Help kids keep their rooms picked up
Windex handprints everywhere and anywhere
Not even half of what I listed is in my contract. I'm nuts and I love to clean.
Obviously my OCD list for the kids is a LOT longer. I love little people. So much fun.
My bosses are completely happy with me and they appreciate all the extra stuff I do. I'm constantly told they do not expect any of it. I work 65 hours a week. They work long days. I like to provide a way for them to spend more time as a family, and they do use that time.
Monday when I get into work, the place looks great. They are tidy themselves.
The fact is my mother cleaned houses when I was young. She made a killing. Must be in my blood![]()
Sorry to toot my own horn there, I just love my career.
Everyone needs to find what works for them in this field and embrace it!
Oh, be right back....I see a speck of dust on my tv.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or, PP, perhaps the "nannies" who find bathing, dressing, and changing kids so taxing they can't throw in a load of laundry just aren't very good at their jobs. Those of us who take our jobs seriously are easily able to multitask and keep the household running smoothly while also doing everything you mentioned.
Keeping the household running smoothly is not a nanny's responsibility. Just because she is physically working in the home does not mean that she is responsible for running it. This is a common misconception and needs to be addressed.
A nanny's job is childcare.
Anyone remember during the 90's that sitcom called "The Nanny?"
The family had the nanny focus on the children and care for them. They had a butler do the cleaning, etc.
That is how it is supposed to be.
For those of you who think otherwise, then you have all been brainwashed by your families.
Do not think for a moment that doing laundry is a typical requirement for a nanny.
I am a professional nanny and if I am asked to do laundry, then I make sure I get paid "extra" for it since it is a benefit for the family vs. a "given."![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or, PP, perhaps the "nannies" who find bathing, dressing, and changing kids so taxing they can't throw in a load of laundry just aren't very good at their jobs. Those of us who take our jobs seriously are easily able to multitask and keep the household running smoothly while also doing everything you mentioned.
Keeping the household running smoothly is not a nanny's responsibility. Just because she is physically working in the home does not mean that she is responsible for running it. This is a common misconception and needs to be addressed.
A nanny's job is childcare.
Anyone remember during the 90's that sitcom called "The Nanny?"
The family had the nanny focus on the children and care for them. They had a butler do the cleaning, etc.
That is how it is supposed to be.
For those of you who think otherwise, then you have all been brainwashed by your families.
Do not think for a moment that doing laundry is a typical requirement for a nanny.
I am a professional nanny and if I am asked to do laundry, then I make sure I get paid "extra" for it since it is a benefit for the family vs. a "given."![]()
LMAO. So I guess parents shouldn't hire a nanny unless they also have a butler? Caring for children involves far more than playing with them. I'm not saying that nannies should clean toilets, but dishes, laundry, driving to activities, meal prep and keeping the kitchen and playroom floors free of food that was tossed or dropped by a testy toddler? All part of childcare, IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or, PP, perhaps the "nannies" who find bathing, dressing, and changing kids so taxing they can't throw in a load of laundry just aren't very good at their jobs. Those of us who take our jobs seriously are easily able to multitask and keep the household running smoothly while also doing everything you mentioned.
Keeping the household running smoothly is not a nanny's responsibility. Just because she is physically working in the home does not mean that she is responsible for running it. This is a common misconception and needs to be addressed.
A nanny's job is childcare.
Anyone remember during the 90's that sitcom called "The Nanny?"
The family had the nanny focus on the children and care for them. They had a butler do the cleaning, etc.
That is how it is supposed to be.
For those of you who think otherwise, then you have all been brainwashed by your families.
Do not think for a moment that doing laundry is a typical requirement for a nanny.
I am a professional nanny and if I am asked to do laundry, then I make sure I get paid "extra" for it since it is a benefit for the family vs. a "given."![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or, PP, perhaps the "nannies" who find bathing, dressing, and changing kids so taxing they can't throw in a load of laundry just aren't very good at their jobs. Those of us who take our jobs seriously are easily able to multitask and keep the household running smoothly while also doing everything you mentioned.
Keeping the household running smoothly is not a nanny's responsibility. Just because she is physically working in the home does not mean that she is responsible for running it. This is a common misconception and needs to be addressed.
A nanny's job is childcare.
Anyone remember during the 90's that sitcom called "The Nanny?"
The family had the nanny focus on the children and care for them. They had a butler do the cleaning, etc.
That is how it is supposed to be.
For those of you who think otherwise, then you have all been brainwashed by your families.
Do not think for a moment that doing laundry is a typical requirement for a nanny.
I am a professional nanny and if I am asked to do laundry, then I make sure I get paid "extra" for it since it is a benefit for the family vs. a "given."![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or, PP, perhaps the "nannies" who find bathing, dressing, and changing kids so taxing they can't throw in a load of laundry just aren't very good at their jobs. Those of us who take our jobs seriously are easily able to multitask and keep the household running smoothly while also doing everything you mentioned.
Keeping the household running smoothly is not a nanny's responsibility. Just because she is physically working in the home does not mean that she is responsible for running it. This is a common misconception and needs to be addressed.
A nanny's job is childcare.
Anyone remember during the 90's that sitcom called "The Nanny?"
The family had the nanny focus on the children and care for them. They had a butler do the cleaning, etc.
That is how it is supposed to be.
For those of you who think otherwise, then you have all been brainwashed by your families.
Do not think for a moment that doing laundry is a typical requirement for a nanny.
I am a professional nanny and if I am asked to do laundry, then I make sure I get paid "extra" for it since it is a benefit for the family vs. a "given."![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or, PP, perhaps the "nannies" who find bathing, dressing, and changing kids so taxing they can't throw in a load of laundry just aren't very good at their jobs. Those of us who take our jobs seriously are easily able to multitask and keep the household running smoothly while also doing everything you mentioned.
Keeping the household running smoothly is not a nanny's responsibility. Just because she is physically working in the home does not mean that she is responsible for running it. This is a common misconception and needs to be addressed.
A nanny's job is childcare.
Anyone remember during the 90's that sitcom called "The Nanny?"
The family had the nanny focus on the children and care for them. They had a butler do the cleaning, etc.
That is how it is supposed to be.
For those of you who think otherwise, then you have all been brainwashed by your families.
Do not think for a moment that doing laundry is a typical requirement for a nanny.
I am a professional nanny and if I am asked to do laundry, then I make sure I get paid "extra" for it since it is a benefit for the family vs. a "given."![]()
I ask this as a real question.
Do you think parents have been somehow brainwashed by former MB/DB friends? Not maliciously of course, just somewhere along the line the role of "Nanny" changed.
I'm not in complete agreement of your stance, but I do agree that somewhere along the line things changed.
Does that even make sense?
Also, are you saying even just laundry for the child you care for is not Nanny's job?
Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or, PP, perhaps the "nannies" who find bathing, dressing, and changing kids so taxing they can't throw in a load of laundry just aren't very good at their jobs. Those of us who take our jobs seriously are easily able to multitask and keep the household running smoothly while also doing everything you mentioned.
Keeping the household running smoothly is not a nanny's responsibility. Just because she is physically working in the home does not mean that she is responsible for running it. This is a common misconception and needs to be addressed.
A nanny's job is childcare.
Anyone remember during the 90's that sitcom called "The Nanny?"
The family had the nanny focus on the children and care for them. They had a butler do the cleaning, etc.
That is how it is supposed to be.
For those of you who think otherwise, then you have all been brainwashed by your families.
Do not think for a moment that doing laundry is a typical requirement for a nanny.
I am a professional nanny and if I am asked to do laundry, then I make sure I get paid "extra" for it since it is a benefit for the family vs. a "given."![]()
nannydebsays wrote:Let's see:
Full childcare (playing, feeding, dressing, diapers/toilet training, logging daily activities, etc.)
Transport to activities and school (4 or 5 days a week)
All child related cooking and meal prep, including packing school lunches
Weekly grocery shopping, using comprehensive list I created
Research on child related activities and classes
Dishwasher duty daily
Kid laundry 2 - 3 x per week
Empty trash/diaper genies
Other errands, from Target runs to returns of parent purchased items
Let dog in/out
Feed and water dog if needed
Keep house generally tidy
Manage housekeeper and other service providers
Sort through and manage the toy mountain
Keep kid clothes seasonally appropriate and help with purchasing new items as needed
Vacuum main kid area 2x a month
Doctor visits for kids as needed and prescription pick-ups
Volunteer at kids school
I probably left some things out, but generally speaking this is what I do weekly. And I still manage to have a good 1.5 - 2 hour break during naptime every day!
I consider my job to be mostly childcare, with a generous side dish of making the family's life run more smoothly. My employers have always been loving parents who work long long hours and want to be able to focus on their kid(s), not on doing dishes and laundry, when they aren't working. Frankly, I see nannies without that sort of "pitch-in" attitude cycling through jobs every year, and that doesn't appeal to me at all.
I try to be the sort of nanny I would want to HIRE if I were the high-powered executive seeking childcare.
Anonymous wrote:Or, PP, perhaps the "nannies" who find bathing, dressing, and changing kids so taxing they can't throw in a load of laundry just aren't very good at their jobs. Those of us who take our jobs seriously are easily able to multitask and keep the household running smoothly while also doing everything you mentioned.