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I like this advice. These people are completely out of line, I can''t believe it''s gotten this far!Date: 4/14/2010 3:24:53 PM
Author: VRBeauty
I''d call each neighbor (or send then a note if you prefer) and simply state that you have decided that you will no longer be watching other children or allowing them to wait in your house for the bus each morning. Period. You don''t owe them an explanation. They are in the position of asking you to do something for them that you have no obligation to take on. Under these circumstances, ''no'' is a complete sentence.
However, if there is the possibility that you''d someday need these neigbors to help watch your kids in the morning, you could take the ''clear rules/guidelines'' approach. ''I can''t watch them in the mornings on a regular basis, but I''d be happy to help out occasionally in a a real emergency.''
If you feel compelled to offer an explanation, make it something generic, like it''s too hectic, or that is our time to make sure my children are ready for the school day. Citing specific situations just leaves the moochers an opening to look for exceptions.
Good luck!
The Egg Harbor Cafe in my childhood town has a great wooden sign up that says this! (It actually says "All unattended children will be given shots of espresso and a free puppy." I love it.)Date: 4/14/2010 2:30:51 PM
Author: TooPatient
A woodworking store in our area has a great sign with a picture of a child & puppy:
Any child left unattended will be given espresso and a puppy.
Date: 4/14/2010 2:36:29 PM
Author: Guilty Pleasure
I''m sorry these people are taking advantage of you!
Three options:
1. Do nothing and be resentful in order to avoid conflict.
2. Start charging a large fee for babysitting, $15 per 15 minutes per dayYou''ll either see a decline in the amount of time and kids or an increase in the weight of your purse!
3. Every time someone calls, answer the phone and tell them NO. Don''t give an excuse like taking a dog to the vet because that leaves room for a next time. Simply say, ''I''m sorry but I won''t be able to do that. Good luck finding somebody!'' Then they are screwed, and will make arrangements ahead of time next time instead of last minute arrangements. If someone drops their kids off at your place without calling, call that parent that day and tell them it is inappropriate and not to be done in the future.
Date: 4/14/2010 10:20:36 PM
Author: Haven
Date: 4/14/2010 2:30:51 PM
Author: TooPatient
A woodworking store in our area has a great sign with a picture of a child & puppy:
Any child left unattended will be given espresso and a puppy.
The Egg Harbor Cafe in my childhood town has a great wooden sign up that says this! (It actually says 'All unattended children will be given shots of espresso and a free puppy.' I love it.)
Every time we go there my mom says 'We need to get one of these for Haven.' Haha!
Date: 4/14/2010 7:53:05 PM
Author: Mara
but i love donuts..!!!
sorry i have nothing worthwhile to add but it made me laugh that someone just dropped their kid off with donuts. here take care of my kid AND eat thousands of calories while you are at it. THANKS.
...
Haha! Thats just like it was growing up in my house!Date: 4/15/2010 10:32:24 AM
Author: karpouzi
Do not offer to babysit for money unless you''d be happy with them taking you up on that offer! There is an interesting anecdote that''s referenced a lot in relation to behavioral economics. A day-care center was having problems with people being late to pick up their kids, so they imposed a penalty/late fee if parents were late. Well, it turns out that after they imposed the penalty, MORE parents started coming late! When they imposed the fee, parents started seeing it as a business transaction instead of a social expectation, and they decided the price was worth it.
Your situation is infuriating. What is wrong with people?![]()
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I think you should just tell the neighbors that this is your special family time and you don''t want to have anyone over during this time. They can''t really argue with that. Also, remind them that you are working from home, so you have your own morning responsibilities to get to as you hustle the kids out the door. If they are working, they can''t really argue with that either.
I think you should be ready for the next two weeks to be a testing of these boundaries. So I''d be sure that if the doorbell rang, the kids were told that they cannot open the door and mom will take care of it. As soon as you see the kid outside, come straight outside to the curb and be nice but firm. I''d say nicer to the kid (it''s not their fault and they are friends with your kids) and firmer with the parent. Walk them out to the car or back to their house and say, "you seem to be in a bind, but we already talked about this and I can''t take care of little X in the mornings."
Maybe also suggest that the main neighbors pair up with the third family (donut family?) and trade off mornings. Quid pro quo is so much better for everyone involved.
Date: 4/15/2010 10:32:24 AM
Author: karpouzi
Do not offer to babysit for money unless you'd be happy with them taking you up on that offer! There is an interesting anecdote that's referenced a lot in relation to behavioral economics. A day-care center was having problems with people being late to pick up their kids, so they imposed a penalty/late fee if parents were late. Well, it turns out that after they imposed the penalty, MORE parents started coming late! When they imposed the fee, parents started seeing it as a business transaction instead of a social expectation, and they decided the price was worth it.
Your situation is infuriating. What is wrong with people?![]()
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Date: 4/15/2010 1:22:52 PM
Author: Girlrocks
To answer a few questions...
1. Where we live, the legal age to be home alone is 8. This child is 10. And has a cell phone. She can surely stay alone for 10 minutes in the morning.
2. I am SURE the donuts are her typical breakfast, she is a little heavy and her mother complains about how she just sits around and watches tv all the time, which is the complete opposite of my kids (hello, turn the tv off mom!)
UPDATE...I take my daughter to practice last night and when I get home there is a message from the mom...''Hi, Girl Monday would like to know if your girls can play...can I bring her over?''....seriously???? I''ve had her every flippin morning this week, my girls don''t even like her, and you want to bring her to MY house? Who calls for their 10 year old anyway for a playdate? My girls call and ask themselves. And if my kids call and ask someone to play, it implies that they are INVITING the child to OUR house, not inviting themselves over.
So now I am furious. 5 minutes later, phone rings again, it''s her. Cross my heart, this is how she starts off the conversation ''Hi, Girl Monday wanted to know if she could come over to play, and by the way, on Monday she didn''t dump the milk out of her tupperware container when she was finished with her cereal that she brought to your house for breakfast, and carried around the milk all day in her backpack and if it spilled it could have really been a mess, so can you please watch her next time and have her dump the milk out and rinse the container?''![]()
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Seriously, fire shooting out of my ears.
So I just took a deep breath and told her that no, she could not come over, and that I was not going to be able to watch her any longer in the mornings. Goodbye.
Haven''t heard from her since.