
This lady was part of our familyWhen I was pregnant with my first child, my husband and I looked into the day care down the street and shook our heads at such extravagances like nannies. Nannies, we just knew, were only for the rich. As we were barely hanging on in the middle class, it wasn't even on our radar. And then reality hit, and we discovered three things about parenting in New York City.
1) Day care can be incredibly inflexible, and work hours in New York City can go much longer than day care hours.
2) Most day cares won't take babies until they're at least 3 months old, and even then, there's a waiting list.
3) Your baby will be sick all winter long, thus making day care an expense you're paying for but not using. A nanny with a tough immune system makes sure you don't get fired from your job.
And with that, we started a part-time nanny search and began to realize that all of the stereotypes we believed about nannies and the people who employ them are wrong.
The most pervasive stereotype, that we also believed, is that you're rich if you hire a nanny. While it helps, it also helps to be rich when you're raising children. Duh. I was making about two dollars more an hour than my nanny was when I went back to work part-time and needed someone with a flexible schedule. If it weren't for the fact that I was trying to build a career, I wouldn't have done it. However, I needed the job for my future, more than for paying for a nanny.
Next up is the assumption that the nanny is treated as "the help" and takes care of the dirty work. Rose Arce explains over at CNN how her nanny's sadness is her own, and she's not alone in that type of bond with a caregiver. When my family moved away from New York City, we had a final farewell meetup with my children's nanny. When we said goodbye to her, both of us were in tears. She gushed about how she loved my children, and I cried so much when she left, I begged my husband to stay in New York. This didn't happen with any of my other goodbyes, but ending a relationship between our family and this woman was heartbreaking. I knew about her children, her life, everything. And of course she knew about mine. We were in it together and for the love of the kids. That's an intense and unbelievably important relationship, and it's hard to let it go.
If you hire a nanny, you're having someone else raise your child. The reality TV moms who breeze in and out of their children's lives don't help to dispel this myth, but let's remember those are women on television and they're incredibly narcissistic. In real life, it's a partnership. And every child psychologist will tell you that your child never has trouble distinguishing between his mother and the nanny. If your child gets excited when the nanny arrives and is sad when she leaves, that's a sign of a great nanny. Not a sign of your lack of mothering. Your child care choice says nothing about your parenting skills and everything about your work life and what is required so you can feel okay going to your job every day.
As some people pointed out in my post on day care and pre-school, no matter where you live if you work odd hours, you'll be hiring a nanny. If your odd hours are because you're a waitress, you may have some nights when paying the nanny takes your whole paycheck. Unlike France, where you get your very own nanny for free, we're all struggling to figure out the best way to make a living and raise a family. Consider that when you make negative assumptions about someone because they have a nanny or put their child into day care. We're all doing what we have to do, and it's an infinitesimal minority who aren't putting their children first.
Do you have a nanny?
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Comments (17)
My sister-in-law has been nanny to my now four kids and she is my saviour. Doing kids laundry and light housework makes my life run much more smoothly. She also does all the homework before we get home at 4:30. Awesome.
What a great article!! I actually like the idea of a nanny if I ever have to have one. I'm not a fan of day cares because as a child my mother had no choice but to put me in one until I was about 5 and she was able to quit her job. I was sick pretty much every day of my life cause a lot of parents would send their kids to day care sick because they had no choice. I had to have tubes and have my adnoids and tonsuls removed by the age of I think 4. I know this still happens so I much prefer the idea of a nanny or leaving my future child with one of those people who watches maybe a couple babies at a time. A girl at my work uses one of those and she loves her and so does her son!
THANK YOU!!!
As a nanny myself I find this article so refreshing. I hate reading the hateful articles about nannies, we aren't all bad and in fact most are wonderful people. I have been with the same family now for 4 yrs, I was there the day mom gave birth to the youngest and I love my job and they love me.
I actually had a manny for about a year for my oldest. I was home, but I was ill, and my then-husband was (and still is LOL) useless. I love the manny like a brother, still, and my oldest is now nearly eighteen. My baby boy and I would not have made it through that very difficult time had I not had such excellent, loving, trustworthy help around the clock. He loved and cared for my son as well as I would have done had I been able, and that comfort to a mother in pain and ill health is more precious than gold. There is no way a daycare would have provided the same care and comfort, let alone the flexibility and peace of mind.
I guess that was a joke that you get a nanny in France for free?
My mom is a nanny for a good friend of ours and she loves it except when the kids' grandparents visit from India because they think my mom's the family maid. The grandma tries to make her do dishes and laundry, it's ridiculous! They should be going back to their country soon so hopefully my mom can get back to her normal job without being bossed around by those rude people. Gosh! Nice article. :)
"Unlike France, where you get your very own nanny for free"
Huh ? No, we don't. Sure, there are subventions, and it's probably much cheaper than in the US, but it's still not free. We pay about 600€ a month, all subventions included, for a full-time nanny that we share with another family. A childcare center would have cost about the same thing (but they're overbooked). Not sharing the nanny would cost us about 1700€ a month.
Most mothers actually stay at home the first few years if they had a low paying job, because there's also a subvention for that, which is actually higher than what would be left of their pay check after childcare costs.
i have a nanny, and love her! i work completely random days and shifts, sometimes with little notice. i could go weeks not working then have a week of 12 hour days. not to mention that when we work days, my hubby and i are both out of the house before 5 am. so instead of waking up our peanut, she gets to sleep and go about her day. andwe donthave a single daycare in the city that is open before 6. shes a lifesaver,and cheaper than daycare!
I have a nanny from France and she's wonderful. I must admit there is a twinge of jealousy when the baby is excited to see her, but I get over it real fast because I know that means she is doing a great job. I, too, feel like it's a partnership and I am always cognizant of the way I ask her to do things and talk to her about her responsibilities. I am probably going to have an au pair until the kids go to school, maybe even beyond. It is a great help to have the house clean and the laundry done when I get home, not to mention French exposure and a comfortable environment for my kids. I grew up speaking French but I don't want to quit my job. Best of both worlds.
I think having a nanny is not odd and great for some.