I am struggling with daycare decisions.
We are on waiting lists everywhere. I did find one center today that is going to open a second one-year-old room because of their long wait list, so Charlotte would have a spot there. It is not amazing, but it is fine and close to our house. She would be in the one-year-old room and at 11.5 months would need to transition to one nap per day on a mat instead of in a crib.
I am also waiting for calls back from some home daycares.
We had an in-home nanny last year and I'm sure I could find someone for this year. I put an add on the local college website and on Care.com. I have three emails from college kids and three replies on Care.com.
This is my issue: when I think about committing to a center, I start to wonder if a nanny would be better. Then when I'm considering nannies, I think that I want DD to be more socialized and should look for a home daycare provider. But then I get concerned about home providers and think that centers are more organized, reliable, etc. And that brings me to maybe a center is too rigid and won't care enough about her as an individual and I should go with a nanny.
It is a vicious cycle.
How do I stop this and just fracking CHOOSE something already?!?!
Re: Daycare decision malaise
I've done both. We had a nanny for 4 months and about an equal time in DC.
Similar things going on with DC, i.e. in the next room he has to be off bottles, take one nap on a mat (bwahahahaha...GL with that - he naps fine for me at home but NOT at DC and without a crib...can't imagine it), etc.
Nanny was nice not having to pick-up and drop off and you don't have to worry about your LO getting sick, but you DO have to worry about the nanny getting sick. Lots of hassle with taxes and whatnot with a nanny so make sure you're factoring in that extra cost.
I like DC and I think some of their "rules" can force us as moms to push our LOs a little more than we might, in a good way.
I will say if you don't LOVE where you are leaving your child it will suck. I know DS is cared for, but I am not as happy with their "curriculum" or lack thereof. He's waitlisted at another place that I love. Not much I can do, but wait it out and it will likely be 6 months or more.
Basically, I don't think there's a wrong answer. Whatever you choose will be fine.
I went through the same thing.
I called around to home daycares, posted a job on Care, and did a "Who wants a job?" post amongst my FB friends. We had a few people that would have worked, but wanted us to pay them as much as I would pay a DC. I had a few interviews set up with people from Care and then they either didn't show, had a schedule change, or wanted to bring their kids with them.
I'm pretty nervous about G in DC, which is why I wanted to go with a sitter. He's never slept anywhere but his crib; no PNP, mat, other crib. He needs white noise, his seahorse, a warm environment, etc. He's a particular kid and he's never shared attention with any other kid, let alone been around one that isn't 9+ years old.
But, when I told my mom all of this, this is what she told me: It's better for him to get used to a "school-like" environment now, so that when he starts preschool, it's not a huge shock to the both of us (like apparently it was with me). Being out of our home will help him adjust to doing so. A DC isn't going to call me an hour before I have to leave to say they're sick/running late. I won't have to worry about what a sitter is doing in my home/what she isn't doing in my home. DC doesn't close (- holidays). He needs to get used to other kids, other adults that aren't me or SO, and being elsewhere.
So, he starts DC 08/28.
SCANDAL!
This. When I nannied, I only had one during the day since the older one was in school. We went out almost everyday. There was a really nice park just up the hill from the house, there was the library, there was this awesome toy store that also had story and craft time, we went to museums, we went to free movies in the park (plus Regal Cinemas had...still has? free kids movies every Tuesday morning during the summer), and we had playdates. He got his interaction with other children his age, plus interaction with his sister when she got home from school, but we also had one-on-one time, structured playtime, and age-appropriate learning activities. There's a difference between being a nanny and being a babysitter.
I think DC is also great for kids who may not otherwise have the opportunity to socialize.
Also a friend of mine loved her DCP because she set such a structured routine for her DD that it was so easy for her to continue that at home in the evenings and weekends.
Could you hire a nanny on a temporary basis and see if you like it? But still stay on a wait list for DC?