I know childcare can be a sensitive topic so let's all try to be respectful of differing opinions on this thread. Some of us choose in-home childcare while others choose daycare. Some have family and friends who are able to watch their children and some parent(s) are able to stay home. This is just a thread for people to commiserate with each other about difficulties in finding childcare.
SO, I've started the search for childcare. I have 6 weeks that I am able to be home with my daughter after she is born. Therefore, I need to find care for my very small daughter soon after she is born. I'm having difficulty in deciding what to do. My mom will be able to watch her at least 2 days a week. She is blessed to be able to work part time and be partially retired at age 50. I would like to ask my child's other grandmother if she could watch her one day a week. She is off work during the day 2 days a week. That would leave me with 2 unfilled days.
There is a local woman who has watched 4 of the last 5 babies to be born in my large extended family at her in-home daycare. I don't personally know her all that well but 3 of my nieces have gone there and their moms loved it. It's about half the cost of a traditional daycare (partly due to the fact that she doesn't declare that income and parents can't deduct it on their taxes). For two days a week it is only $75. My concern with her is she has 6 children in her home each day. She is the only one caring for them. And, I know there are 4 pregnant women who are interested in her services and she only has 3 spots open for fall. The first 3 to commit get the spots. I'm just a little concerned because that means she will have THREE infants in her care! That's a lot for one person to handle.
The other daycare options around us aren't great. We live in St. Louis City and I would prefer to not send my daughter to most of the daycares around our home. There are some daycares that I would consider, but still having an infant in daycare is SUPER expensive here. I'm not even sure we could afford it. The ones I do love I know we can't afford. Their weekly pricing is about $400. Obviously our daughter would only go 2 days a week but that's a lot of money!
I guess I really just wanted a place to vent and type all this out. Any ideas, suggestions, words of encouragement?
Re: Childcare, Babysitting, Day Care, etc.
Edit: I have even nannied for a family who had cameras around the house. They let me know during my interview to make sure I was comfortable with it but that way they were able to "check-in" on their son during the day.
I have so much respect for people who need to find outside childcare. I can't imagine the stress it entails, emotionally and financially. Hang in there, ladies. You're all strong and you'll figure it out.
also, $400 is pretty average for a high quality program. That's what I would pay at my center. Price does go down as they move on to other classrooms/get older.
We are planning on having my MIL watch the baby 2 days and my husband be off one day during the week with the baby and then potentially go to daycare twice a week to get used to being there.
I understand how expensive childcare is! At my work it was $1900 per month for 1 infant. I got 50% off but that was still too much. I am now a SAHM. Are you or DH able to switch to 4 10 hour days? Otherwise I would personally look for a nanny share or a SAHM that has qualifications to watch your baby.
Married: October 2014
TTC #1 since September 2015
I am very stressed about this too. I am a nurse and work both 8 and 12 hour shifts. I'd be looking for 2-3 days a week of childcare. My work does offer a daycare that is subsidized but I'm on the waiting list there, and I'm looking for backup options if that doesn't work out. Most of the places in my area are $75-$100/day but this particular daycare is subsidized to only $65/day (assuming 10-hour days). So it's a big difference! I've used Care.com to contact a family day-care, but my feeling is that most places are going to have waiting lists a mile long.
My other option if I can't find a daycare provider is to only work 12 hour shifts on Saturdays and Sundays when DH is home. I think that would be miserable for me, but it would save us a lot in daycare costs. My parents are only in their mid-50's and nowhere close to retiring, and MIL lives over an hour away (also 10 years out from retirement). I do have an aunt that lives nearby that may be able to provide back-up care, but I don't want to rely on her too much because she just retired and probably wants to enjoy time to herself!
But this stuff is really stressful! Part of me is very resentful that I can't be a SAHM. The other part of me is very resentful that I should feel the need to choose between career and baby. I'm committed to having both (currently, anyway), but why should it be so hard?
money than he does and have the insurance benefits, so me staying at home isn't an option and we don't have family close by either :-(
DH brought up the idea of a nanny share. I had never heard of this before, but his friends are doing this with their baby. Basically they found a nanny who already works for a family, but can take on one more child, and as long as the family is cool with it (and you are comfortable with the situation) it can help the cost go down for both families.
ETA: I just found this list of in-home daycare throughout the area: https://childcarecenter.us/missouri_homecare/saint_louis_mo_county#.VsOzS0Y3mMM
OP, I wouldn't feel comfortable with more than 6 and definitely not 3 infants. I find it hard to believe she is licensed for 3 infants if there are other children there.
Married: October 2014
TTC #1 since September 2015
I love that my daughter will be the only infant and then I think the next child closest to her age is 2 and the other kids are three and four, so they are not as hands on as a infant is and there is also a helper.
My lady also takes a holiday around Labor Day weekend and she is closed for like three days. We normally go up to NY at the time so we will just coordinate vacation time around then and just like any day care center we will still have to pay for that time because we are still using that space.
Married: October 2014
TTC #1 since September 2015
DS: EDD, December 19th, 2014. Born, December 19th, 2014!
DD: EDD, July 18th, 2016. Born, July 19th, 2016!
Baby #3: EDD, April 16th, 2016
Also this may sound minor, but you need to think about someone caring for your child when their child is around. Her child will obviously be her favorite and it's her first baby. I don't mean to sound terribly negative but the worst thing is that 2 weeks in it doesn't work out and you need to find emergency child care that is inconvenient or too expensive.
All that being said choosing what type of care works for your family is super important... and completely overwhelming. We initially wanted to go with an in home provider but there weren't many options in our area and the ones that did have openings just didn't feel right to us. We toured every single daycare in our area before we picked the one we settled on.
Our son goes to a large daycare M-F, 7:30-4. He will be in an infant/toddler room until he is 2 and the tuition is $250/week. Our daycare is in a town on the outskirts of the big city we live in that I drive through on my way to work (we live in the city but commute out of the city for work) so our tuition is a bit lower than if we had care in the city.
Things that were important to us:
-Cleanliness of the facility... this seems like a given but some of the in-home places we visited just didn't fit the bill for us.
-Education/programming - This wasn't initially important to us because we were focused on the here and now and didn't worry about how educational the facility would be. However, I'm SO thankful we accidentally ended up in a facility (that is also a pre-school) that starts their educational programming young. Our son has blossomed under this environment!
-No violations with the state (this means the center/provider is registered with the state and receives routine inspections. We didn't even consider providers that weren't registered with the state... the risk just wasn't worth it to us.
-Vaccine requirements - Daycares are cesspools... They just are and there's no way around it. We picked a center than has strict vaccine requirements.
DS: EDD, December 19th, 2014. Born, December 19th, 2014!
DD: EDD, July 18th, 2016. Born, July 19th, 2016!
Baby #3: EDD, April 16th, 2016
I was a SAHM for 18 months partially because childcare costs were so high. I took on a pt childcare job by chance but had previous experience from college. I live 2 blocks from a grade school and knew someone looking for coverage between her commuter train and her son's afternoon kindergarten so it just worked out. I really enjoyed it and I've had a regular part-time family/job each year since. It just so happens that each family has outgrown, moved, etc so I'm only my third family in three years but they have been excellent references and I'm still in touch.
First, at some level there is wiggle room but you get what you pay for and child care isn't and shouldn't be cheap. It's sad how little centers pay their teachers. I charge a going "nanny" rate which is a lot more than an "at home daycare" rate because I take on one family and tailor to their needs. I do homework, therapy exercises, special meals, keep their car seats in my car, join fun activities, whatever they need. Plus I'm very hands on and love them truly.
I have network of acquaintances who also watch kids and I see everything from my level of care to a neighbor's unlicensed center in her house. She has the kids in unsafe car seats (three year old in a backless booster!), she spends 99% of her time on her phone while she has 6 kids at an unfenced park, etc. She is cheap, like half what I charge, but people don't stay. It's sad actually.
I would say that there is NO way I could have been a good caretaker to other kids the first year of my daughter's kife. I'll be taking off many months after this baby. The FTM who plans to nanny would be a deal breaker for me. I'd absolutely use a mom after a year old of so but no way I'd trust a first timer with her own newborn. She doesn't even realize what she's attempting.
DS: EDD, December 19th, 2014. Born, December 19th, 2014!
DD: EDD, July 18th, 2016. Born, July 19th, 2016!
Baby #3: EDD, April 16th, 2016
One family I nannied for (five years), two of the children were two months apart in age. There was also a toddler. One infant was colicky for 5 months, the other liked to be held a lot (one was 3mo when I got him, the other was 5mo). Needless to say, it took A LOT of adjusting. The saving grace was that the toddler was an amazing kid that could keep herself entertained and was totally low-key. Could I have done three infants, maybe. It would have been a damn nightmare though.....especially if one of those infants was mine, knowing that I would have to pump (or BF) on top of taking care of the other two infants. There were some days that the infants spent most of the day crying. I would say it was a lot of work, but mentally....that is like someone handing you triplets and expecting you to be able to fend for yourself for 8-9 hours a day, without any help. When it came to schedules for all of my nanny families, I have always put all of the kids on the same schedule, and the parents are given that schedule to either follow on the off days, or not follow it if they choose. But they all napped at the same time, ate at the same time, etc. Even when the fourth kid was added into the mix later on, it was always the same schedule....just like when I worked at the daycare.
The family that I have now, they were 4 month old twins when I started. My daughter would come to work with me, and she was 18mo. It was still a struggle getting into the swing of things, because of the fact that the twins were 100% dependent on me, and my daughter was still 75% dependent on me. I will say that you can't always assume that a FTM will put her child's needs before the nanny kids needs. I would say that 80% of the time (even to this day), the nanny kids are taken care of, before my daughter is tended to (unless in an emergency situation). I do this on purpose, just because of the fact that she is an only child and I want her to have to learn patience and that we adults cannot always jump to her every whimper or plea. My daughter is now almost 4.5 years old, and the twins are 3 years old. They argue like siblings, they fight like siblings, and my daughter is forced to have to share....so I find that having her with me here, is actually a really good benefit for her in the long run. Plus, it gives them someone else (other than each other) to play with during the day.
That being said, I am actually quitting my job in June. Could I force myself to bring a newborn to work with me (DD would be in preschool three days a week, and with grandparents the other days), and still work? Yeah. But is it right? Nope. Not only will I be recovering from a c-section, I will be back to pumping and having a infant that relays on me 100% of the time. One of the twins cannot handle attention being taken off of him, so he would have an extremely hard time with me having to spend 15min pumping, feedings, changing, crying infant, etc. The other twin would be fine, as she is able to play independently and doesn't mind when the focus is taken off of her for a little bit. In the off chance that I would go back to a nanny job, I would try to find someone around this baby's age, so I could keep them on the same schedule and they would be at the same age for doing things when they are a little bit older. But would I feel comfortable, even after 12+ years of nannying, going back right away. Nope. Not in a sleep deprived, trying to get into a groove, state. I would wait until my baby is 4-6 months old before I would feel like I could take on a nanny kid, and give that nanny kid the best of me. Even though I survived many nanny kids, teething, colic, potty training, long days (and sometimes weekends), and sometimes four kids at a time.....nothing prepared me for actual parenthood, and being sleep deprived. Its amazing how fast you can lose patience for a screaming baby, when you haven't sleep in what feels like years. Unfortunately, nobody was going to let me off shift at the end of the day, and on weekends....with my own child. I would have a hard time leaving a FTM, with more than one infant (along with her own)....a few months into parenthood.
Married: October 2014
TTC #1 since September 2015