Our nannies (two in twelve years) have always done this light housekeeping (make the beds, fold everyone's laundry and put it away, do the prep work for meals, vacuum dust or dirt off the kitchen/living room floor, work in tandem with me to organize drawers and closets, bookshelves and cabinets). I greatly appreciate the nanny's help with all of these tasks.
I think that other posters have it right, there is a difference between asking and expecting your nanny to do relatively "normal" (but perhaps still time-consuming and difficult) work around the house, and showing no consideration by leaving piles of dirty dishes and household items strewn everywhere like a slob.
Anonymous wrote:The people talking about nannies being lazy and not wanting to do something that is not fun are trying to lie to themselves that they aren't lazy asses themselves. If a nanny does it willingly all week long, she is not lazy. But it IS understandable that she doesn't want to clean up after your kids weekend, when it looks like a tornado hit the house sometime after they left on Friday. That is your duty, stop shirking it!
You seem to lack understanding that you were hired to do a job. The employer can choose to outsource whatever she wants. Its not her duty to launder the clothes the kids wore them on the weekend if she decided to hire a nanny to do laundry.
If you don't want the job, you are free to quit. The reason so many of you are angry is that you have this fantasy of a job that requires no work. You don't quit because you know that its difficult to find another job and even harder to find one that requires little work. This should tell you that work is actually work. As a nanny, your job is to make the families life easier not expect the family to do whatever they can to minimize your workload while they are paying you.
Anonymous wrote:No the nanny is doing the cleaning while she is on the clock. You really are an incredibly lazy worker.
The people talking about nannies being lazy and not wanting to do something that is not fun are trying to lie to themselves that they aren't lazy asses themselves. If a nanny does it willingly all week long, she is not lazy. But it IS understandable that she doesn't want to clean up after your kids weekend, when it looks like a tornado hit the house sometime after they left on Friday. That is your duty, stop shirking it!
Anonymous wrote:Also as an aside, what makes you all think that you're so much more busy than the rest of the world?? I'm busy.
While you are on the clock for the employer you aren't supposed to be "busy" doing your own thing. Your employer is paying you for set hours. Your employer can change the % of time spent on tasks. Your employer may decide that its fine if you and the kids don't go on an outing every single day so you can do the laundry or clean up the toys from the weekend. Frankly, I doubt any of you give a second thought about missing out on engaging the kids every single second while you are on the clock. You simply don't want to do things that aren't fun but work isn't always fun.
Anonymous wrote:Also as an aside, what makes you all think that you're so much more busy than the rest of the world?? I'm busy.
While you are on the clock for the employer you aren't supposed to be "busy" doing your own thing. Your employer is paying you for set hours. Your employer can change the % of time spent on tasks. Your employer may decide that its fine if you and the kids don't go on an outing every single day so you can do the laundry or clean up the toys from the weekend. Frankly, I doubt any of you give a second thought about missing out on engaging the kids every single second while you are on the clock. You simply don't want to do things that aren't fun but work isn't always fun.
Also as an aside, what makes you all think that you're so much more busy than the rest of the world?? I'm busy.
nannydebsays wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the problem here is one of degree and it may be that the various posters are closer to consensus than they think. I really can't imagine that many parents do no cleanup all weekend, leaving two days worth of dirty dishes and trash and toys strewn about and staring at overflowing diaper pails because "the nanny will do it" on Monday. On the other hand, some of you nannies seem a bit insecure about your chosen professional and are waaay quick to outrage when you think a fellow nanny might be getting treated like "the help."
The fact that a parent does not spend Sunday night getting the house in whatever condition the nanny is expected to leave it on Friday does not make him or her lazy or a poor parent, any more than your failure to take your charges shoe shopping and research school options and purge their closets makes you a bad nanny. Parents get their fair share of the "not fun" aspects of parenting, and then some. But if they are efficient about using their time, it will likely be a different set of "not fun" tasks than what the nanny is charged with doing. This is reality and the norm, as is clear from the other gripe thread about how much you all hate Mondays.
Parents are not all entitled slobs looking to take advantage of nannies. We're busy, and that is why we pay you to take over some of the more delegable aspects of raising children, including the extra cleanup on Mondays.
Odd, I also do the shoe shopping, the closet purging, and the school option researching. Guess I am not in any way shape or form a "bad nanny", huh?![]()
No one is saying all parents are slobs. What people are saying is that parents who take on the "yucky" stuff when they are in charge of their children are much more likely to RETAIN their super nanny. Parents who don't? They'll be replacing nanny every year or so, when the annoyance and burn-out get to be too much for any nanny.
Anonymous wrote:I think the problem here is one of degree and it may be that the various posters are closer to consensus than they think. I really can't imagine that many parents do no cleanup all weekend, leaving two days worth of dirty dishes and trash and toys strewn about and staring at overflowing diaper pails because "the nanny will do it" on Monday. On the other hand, some of you nannies seem a bit insecure about your chosen professional and are waaay quick to outrage when you think a fellow nanny might be getting treated like "the help."
The fact that a parent does not spend Sunday night getting the house in whatever condition the nanny is expected to leave it on Friday does not make him or her lazy or a poor parent, any more than your failure to take your charges shoe shopping and research school options and purge their closets makes you a bad nanny. Parents get their fair share of the "not fun" aspects of parenting, and then some. But if they are efficient about using their time, it will likely be a different set of "not fun" tasks than what the nanny is charged with doing. This is reality and the norm, as is clear from the other gripe thread about how much you all hate Mondays.
Parents are not all entitled slobs looking to take advantage of nannies. We're busy, and that is why we pay you to take over some of the more delegable aspects of raising children, including the extra cleanup on Mondays.
Anonymous wrote:I think the problem here is one of degree and it may be that the various posters are closer to consensus than they think. I really can't imagine that many parents do no cleanup all weekend, leaving two days worth of dirty dishes and trash and toys strewn about and staring at overflowing diaper pails because "the nanny will do it" on Monday. On the other hand, some of you nannies seem a bit insecure about your chosen professional and are waaay quick to outrage when you think a fellow nanny might be getting treated like "the help."
The fact that a parent does not spend Sunday night getting the house in whatever condition the nanny is expected to leave it on Friday does not make him or her lazy or a poor parent, any more than your failure to take your charges shoe shopping and research school options and purge their closets makes you a bad nanny. Parents get their fair share of the "not fun" aspects of parenting, and then some. But if they are efficient about using their time, it will likely be a different set of "not fun" tasks than what the nanny is charged with doing. This is reality and the norm, as is clear from the other gripe thread about how much you all hate Mondays.
Parents are not all entitled slobs looking to take advantage of nannies. We're busy, and that is why we pay you to take over some of the more delegable aspects of raising children, including the extra cleanup on Mondays.