by brihoney » Mon Jun 18, 2012 9:55 pm
Our first au pair was a bit of a disaster - she had just got engaged and spent a lot of the time on the phone texting (I think) her fiance, and was a bit glum around the house. At times she warmed to our 4 yr old, but really I think she the bit of her job she enjoyed most was picking clothes out for the baby and dressing him!
It all went bad with a strange string of circumstances, with her asking (in tears) to return to france to sort something out, then letting a man into our house in the middle of the night the night before she was due to leave, and then leaving early leaving what turned out to be her fiance (who we had never met and had just arrived from france) in her bedroom in our house without asking us!
Luckily firing her was fairly easy as she knew she had messed up big time.
But I really learnt what I wanted out of an au pair, and the second time round looked for someone who really liked children. We had a wonderful girl for 6 months, who loved spending time with both our boys, and would do things like ask if she could take my older boy to the cinema on her day off. He still talks about her, and we skype occassionally. He was also talking about the relationships between his soft toys the other day and said "no, that's not the mummy, that is that one's au pair" (it think it meant a bigger toy that was the other ones friend).
Some people are natural and enjoy children's company, and if that is what you want, and your au pair just doesn't seem to be like that, she probably won't change whatever you say. I think the first week or so of having the au pair is key. I told our second one that the important thing initially was for her to make friends with my little ones and let them get used to her. But the other thing I found was it is far easier to explain all their duties and what you expect to begin with. I didn't and found it harder to get them to help with some chores if they hadn't be the ones that I told them about initially (I didn't want to overload on the chores side to begin with). Its all a learning experience I guess, and hopefully we get better at it.
Good luck with your situation, I hope you get through it
Our first au pair was a bit of a disaster - she had just got engaged and spent a lot of the time on the phone texting (I think) her fiance, and was a bit glum around the house. At times she warmed to our 4 yr old, but really I think she the bit of her job she enjoyed most was picking clothes out for the baby and dressing him!
It all went bad with a strange string of circumstances, with her asking (in tears) to return to france to sort something out, then letting a man into our house in the middle of the night the night before she was due to leave, and then leaving early leaving what turned out to be her fiance (who we had never met and had just arrived from france) in her bedroom in our house without asking us!
Luckily firing her was fairly easy as she knew she had messed up big time.
But I really learnt what I wanted out of an au pair, and the second time round looked for someone who really liked children. We had a wonderful girl for 6 months, who loved spending time with both our boys, and would do things like ask if she could take my older boy to the cinema on her day off. He still talks about her, and we skype occassionally. He was also talking about the relationships between his soft toys the other day and said "no, that's not the mummy, that is that one's au pair" (it think it meant a bigger toy that was the other ones friend).
Some people are natural and enjoy children's company, and if that is what you want, and your au pair just doesn't seem to be like that, she probably won't change whatever you say. I think the first week or so of having the au pair is key. I told our second one that the important thing initially was for her to make friends with my little ones and let them get used to her. But the other thing I found was it is far easier to explain all their duties and what you expect to begin with. I didn't and found it harder to get them to help with some chores if they hadn't be the ones that I told them about initially (I didn't want to overload on the chores side to begin with). Its all a learning experience I guess, and hopefully we get better at it.
Good luck with your situation, I hope you get through it