Anonymous wrote:New moms often think that babies are easy and that nannies have a lot of down time. They think they need to give their employees a list of chores to keep them busy. “I’m not paying her to sit all day”—an unpleasant refrain we’ve heard too many times. Let me assure you as the mother of a colicky baby, all babies are not easy, and there isn’t always a big block in the day with nothing to do. Remember, if a nanny is vacuuming she may not hear crying. If she has a list of domestic chores to do, she will not be spending that time with the baby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some parents just like stretching their dollar to the max!!
They assume that since the Nanny is already in the home, that she might as well unload the dishwasher, do the laundry, take out the trash as well as feed Fido.
What these parents do not realize is that by adding household chores, attention is taken away from their precious child.
Even if it is only 1%, that is time that is focused on something else....Not your child.
I hate being distracted by chores.
I hate even using the word since it reminds me of being a child myself ironically.
I hate stressing about making sure I get the laundry finished or the dishes put away before my bosses get home.
This would be reasonable except many nannies who don't want to be "distracted" by chores will prefer to be "distracted" by their phone or their own errands instead. And then claim it does no harm for the child to have to learn independent play while their nanny texts or runs to the grocery store.
OP, sounds like you are taking off virtually all household tasks from your list to have your nanny focus on the child. I don't think it's absolutely necessary to get top-notch care, but you make the right decision for your family. And know you should be able to hold the nanny to very high childcare standards as you are both compensating well and asking for almost no other duties.
You are so full of bitter sh*t, PP. If you have a nanny with a phone issue you hired the wrong nanny. OP is paying okay - $25 an hour is par for a nanny with a degree but nothing special. The nanny should take care of everything related to the baby - baby's laundry, cooking for the baby, etc. and nothing more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The nannies on here are crazy and so entitled. OP, what you are looking for is very reasonable and you are being upfront. You are also offering generous pay and benefits. If a nanny doesn't want to do these tasks then they won't apply. Do not scale back what you're asking for and make sure you don't end up with a nanny who takes advantage of your generosity. We've been there.
+1 and I'm a nanny
Does your boss ask you to cook dinner? Do you get a break during the day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some parents just like stretching their dollar to the max!!
They assume that since the Nanny is already in the home, that she might as well unload the dishwasher, do the laundry, take out the trash as well as feed Fido.
What these parents do not realize is that by adding household chores, attention is taken away from their precious child.
Even if it is only 1%, that is time that is focused on something else....Not your child.
I hate being distracted by chores.
I hate even using the word since it reminds me of being a child myself ironically.
I hate stressing about making sure I get the laundry finished or the dishes put away before my bosses get home.
This would be reasonable except many nannies who don't want to be "distracted" by chores will prefer to be "distracted" by their phone or their own errands instead. And then claim it does no harm for the child to have to learn independent play while their nanny texts or runs to the grocery store.
OP, sounds like you are taking off virtually all household tasks from your list to have your nanny focus on the child. I don't think it's absolutely necessary to get top-notch care, but you make the right decision for your family. And know you should be able to hold the nanny to very high childcare standards as you are both compensating well and asking for almost no other duties.
Anonymous wrote:Some parents just like stretching their dollar to the max!!
They assume that since the Nanny is already in the home, that she might as well unload the dishwasher, do the laundry, take out the trash as well as feed Fido.
What these parents do not realize is that by adding household chores, attention is taken away from their precious child.
Even if it is only 1%, that is time that is focused on something else....Not your child.
I hate being distracted by chores.
I hate even using the word since it reminds me of being a child myself ironically.
I hate stressing about making sure I get the laundry finished or the dishes put away before my bosses get home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most nannies don’t mind helping out with these tasks. Helping out being the operative phrase; don’t leave her tons of dishes leftover from the weekend or pile up kids clothes because you’re lazy. I do these things as part of my job but I deeply resent having to clean messes I had nothing to do with making.
Op here. I will scrap everything except receiving packages because we want our child to be the main focus. We don’t want any nanny to feel like we are taking advantage of her. Btw, I already mentioned that we have a weekly housekeeper and we are very clean people.
OP, you are offering a very generous rate and you will have literally a line of applicants who will be willing to do your very limited list of chores. Don't listen to diva nannies here. If you have a healthy infant, it's the easiest nanny job there is. The baby isn't mobile and sleeps a lot. And it will be QUITE some time before the baby is ready for storytimes or classes (ridiculous).
Please also don't imagine that anyone narrates or sings to the baby continuously without breaks. Such intense focus simply isn't good for infants who can overstimulated very easily.
Total nonsense! Babies are not over-stimulated by their caregiver speaking to them and describing what she is doing! This is how babies learn the concept of language.
Our nanny is not a "diva" - she is a true teacher. And, trust me, narrating is exhausting! By the end of a weekend doing what our nanny does every day has me begging for a nap! Washing the floor is easier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most nannies don’t mind helping out with these tasks. Helping out being the operative phrase; don’t leave her tons of dishes leftover from the weekend or pile up kids clothes because you’re lazy. I do these things as part of my job but I deeply resent having to clean messes I had nothing to do with making.
Op here. I will scrap everything except receiving packages because we want our child to be the main focus. We don’t want any nanny to feel like we are taking advantage of her. Btw, I already mentioned that we have a weekly housekeeper and we are very clean people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some parents just like stretching their dollar to the max!!
They assume that since the Nanny is already in the home, that she might as well unload the dishwasher, do the laundry, take out the trash as well as feed Fido.
What these parents do not realize is that by adding household chores, attention is taken away from their precious child.
Even if it is only 1%, that is time that is focused on something else....Not your child.
I hate being distracted by chores.
I hate even using the word since it reminds me of being a child myself ironically.
I hate stressing about making sure I get the laundry finished or the dishes put away before my bosses get home.
What do you think stay at home moms do? Do you not think they empty the dishwasher during the day? Most kids could stand to not be focused on 1% of the day. Also, they sleep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most nannies don’t mind helping out with these tasks. Helping out being the operative phrase; don’t leave her tons of dishes leftover from the weekend or pile up kids clothes because you’re lazy. I do these things as part of my job but I deeply resent having to clean messes I had nothing to do with making.
Op here. I will scrap everything except receiving packages because we want our child to be the main focus. We don’t want any nanny to feel like we are taking advantage of her. Btw, I already mentioned that we have a weekly housekeeper and we are very clean people.
OP, you are offering a very generous rate and you will have literally a line of applicants who will be willing to do your very limited list of chores. Don't listen to diva nannies here. If you have a healthy infant, it's the easiest nanny job there is. The baby isn't mobile and sleeps a lot. And it will be QUITE some time before the baby is ready for storytimes or classes (ridiculous).
Please also don't imagine that anyone narrates or sings to the baby continuously without breaks. Such intense focus simply isn't good for infants who can overstimulated very easily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most nannies don’t mind helping out with these tasks. Helping out being the operative phrase; don’t leave her tons of dishes leftover from the weekend or pile up kids clothes because you’re lazy. I do these things as part of my job but I deeply resent having to clean messes I had nothing to do with making.
Op here. I will scrap everything except receiving packages because we want our child to be the main focus. We don’t want any nanny to feel like we are taking advantage of her. Btw, I already mentioned that we have a weekly housekeeper and we are very clean people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The nannies on here are crazy and so entitled. OP, what you are looking for is very reasonable and you are being upfront. You are also offering generous pay and benefits. If a nanny doesn't want to do these tasks then they won't apply. Do not scale back what you're asking for and make sure you don't end up with a nanny who takes advantage of your generosity. We've been there.
+1 and I'm a nanny