Tag Archives: childcare

My “End of Au Pairs” Story – A Short Summary

As of yesterday, we no longer have an au pair. For real. Our family has decided to stop hosting au pairs and take advantage of a local afterschool program instead.

If you have been reading closely or know us personally, you know that our au pair arrived in late February, which means we ended mid-year. Everyone who has heard this news keeps wanting to know my story. I have been retiscent about telling it publicly, not because I’m saving it for the book – which I still hope to publish one day – but because I realize that anything I say can become politicized. People who are pro-au pairs may feel like I’m a traitor to the cause, and people who are anti-au pairs may say, “See, even a host mom who is committed to the program [can't make it work]….” Not that I care what people think, but I want to be thoughtful and careful about what I put out there in the blogosphere.

So here’s what I feel that I can say, and I preface these thoughts by noting that we probably would do it all over again – hosting since February 2005 – if we found ourselves in the same circumstances and knew then what we know now. Probably.

1) As you know from my prior post, I was just diagnosed in March with celiac disease. To oversimplify, that means gluten is bad for me. At first, this diagnosis felt like the end of life as I knew it. (No more bread, croissants, you name it.) Well, it was, but not in the way I expected. Since I changed my diet, I am like a new person. Among other things, I feel like I’ve gained another hour in the day, since my energy and concentration levels have peaked. I decided that I want to spend that hour with my kids. What better to use it for? I want to take a more front-and-center role in their lives. I never could do that before, and I always wished I could. I thought it was being in a demanding job (law), which I wasn’t willing to leave, or something else that was wearing me down or taking my attention, but it turns out it was actually that I was eating the wrong things. I now believe that getting one’s biochemistry right is the key to the good life, but that’s a story for another post. So, given the above, I frankly don’t need as much help as I did before.

2) Our last au pair wasn’t a bad “nanny” by any means, and in fact I would readily recommend her to another family (and already have). Our kids were well taken care of, but she just wasn’t working out for us. After hosting five au pairs before her, we have a pretty good idea what we expect, personality and workwise, and her style, manner and expectations did not match ours. To be fair, the au pair before her was amazing and was with us for two years, so our new one had a tough act to follow. Finally, she was sick for about ten days during her first month, with a high fever, and it threw us all a bit off track on the training and “getting to know each other” phase. I always say things happen for a reason, and all of these factors made it easier for us to make the break with au pairs, which we have always known that eventually we needed to do. At the same time, this au pair deserves a family who is committed to the program and her year in the U.S., not one biding its time until the year is over.

3) The switch from one person to the next is often difficult, and the older our children got the harder they found the transitions (especially my seven year old). So another simple factor is that we all started to get “au pair overload”. There were just too many changes, instead of the consistency that should be a hallmark of childhood. The fact that this new au pair had a personality in stark contrast to our prior one – which was not evident in the phone interview – simply highlighted the change. The fact that I was less willing to invest my energy trying to “smooth” it out – wanting instead to spend it on my kids full stop – did too.

4) My daughter starts turns five years old and starts Kindergarten in the fall. Once we decided that we might stop hosting au pairs, I didn’t want to wait. I didn’t want to lose even one more minute being frustrated (because once you make a decision like this, even the littlest annoyances become frustrating), so that I could instead focus on being happy and available for my kids in their precious young years. (You only get them once!) There was a day or two where I thought – “Hmm, maybe we can try another person until next February and then call it quits” – but I quickly dismissed the thought and went with my gut.

5) We considered spending another few months to try to make it work and ending at the end of the summer if things didn’t fall into place. However, we realized that the longer we hosted this au pair, the less chance she would actually have to rematch, since families usually don’t want to match with an in-country au pair who only has six months or less left of her year.

6) God, it is good to have our house back to ourselves. The room has already been remade into an office, and we can walk around the house in our underwear (if we ever wanted to do that). :) ‘Nuff said.

The funny thing is, our last au pair left yesterday morning. Our four year old was excited, because she knew that this meant mom and dad would be the go-to people all the time. But it didn’t mean she hasn’t taken away something precious from the host family experience. She spent the afternoon watching (at her request) videos with cartoons of Thai songs and schoolchildren, courtesy of another former au pair. She said, “Mommy, come watch the sixth one with me. I love that one!” I watched it, having no idea what they were singing about, and my daughter intuitively translated for me what is (or what she thinks is) the storyline.

All of our former au pairs have actually been extremely supportive of our decision to “move beyond the hosting stage” – and I am sure they will be in our lives for many days to come. In fact, we may even appreciate them more now, since the au pair clock has stopped and we can reminisce about old times!

The First Week with an Au Pair (It Doesn’t Have to Suck)

OK, let’s cut to the bottom line. The first week with your au pair may suck. Especially if you are a new host parent. She doesn’t know how to do anything, from making lunches to driving to fill in the blank. She’s full of questions, and you aren’t even sure how to answer all of them, let alone find the patience for it. Your schedule is completely thrown off balance. Your kids are having a hard time adjusting. Your spouse is having a hard time adjusting. Life can only get better, right….?

Well, it doesn’t have to suck, and here’s why: it’s all about attitude. Not just hers. Yours.

Q: What are you doing this for?

A: The well-being of your family.

Remember that every time you help your au pair, you are also helping yourself. If you take a bit of time at the beginning to set things right, you will have the next 11+ months to reap the benefits. If you stress out about it, that stress gets passed on to your au pair and, ultimately, your entire family.

How do you stop yourself from stressing? Take a long-term view. The first week passes quickly. Almost as quickly, in fact, as the first few months of your child’s life. (Remember how much of that sucked too, even as some of the best moments of your life were being made?)

It is a good deed to treat your au pair with care and compassion. It is also – as simple as it may sound – good business. If you had a new employee at any other job, you wouldn’t expect him or her to know how to use the copy machine or log onto the computer system without being taught. Why expect that your au pair knows how to turn on your stove or dishwasher?

Invest some time, and you will thank yourself later. Or, as I said above, if you have the right attitude, the first won’t actually suck. It will simply be the first stage in an important process of giving your family and au pair an amazing year.

Love and the Roots of Happiness

I was hoping to have this post ready for Valentine’s Day yesterday, but alas life is not always what we hope. Sometimes it is worse, and often it is better.

Two people in the last two days have asked about my au pair book, and I am tempted to say that I am not procrastinating. That is true, in part. To some degree, I am biding my time, because if I think about it now I will get all emotional (as our au pair of two years leaving in about a week). On the other hand, however, I am making a calculated effort to leave it be for a while, so I can approach the topic with new eyes.

In the meantime, I am reading books here and there on parenting, and I am pondering the most important quality an au pair can have:  love. Unlike the Beatles song, love is not all you need. But without love, there is nothing.

What does it mean to fully love a child? A key aspect of love is to be fully present in children’s lives, with an open heart. Here’s what one pioneering child psychiatrist and author says about love and joyful parenting:

One of the best ways to be a great parent (and a happy adult) is to let yourself delve deeply into what it means to be a child and relish it, the way, for example, you once relished mud. Now you avoid mud, but once you probably jumped plop right into it and loved the sound it made and the mess it sent up. You may even have rolled in it and made pies out of it. If you want to be happy (and be a great parent), celebrate childhood in its specific details, not just in the abstract. Celebrate mud. And messes. And noise. And spooky things. And chocolate anything and ketchup on pizza. Celebrate what it feels like to go to bed really, really looking forward to tomorrow.

- Edward M. Hallowell, M.D., The Childhood Roots of Adult Happiness

So, ask yourself first:  will she (or he) join in the joy of childhood with a loving heart and help instill the roots of lifelong happiness? If you can answer yes, cherish how fortunate you (and your children) really are!

A Quiet Food Revolution

Hello to my lovely readers at Au Pair with Flair. Just a short message to tell you where I am. Maybe you love this blog, but you wish there was more of it. Also, maybe you are wondering whatever happened to the book I mentioned that I was writing about au pairs?

Well, I have been in the middle of a quiet food revolution. In other words, for months I was having digestion issues, and I am finally starting to come to the root of the problem. If you are interested in hearing more about it, you can read my other blog – click here.

In short, I’ve been a bit preoccupied and exhausted due to the strain on my system. The new schedule for the book is Summer 2011. I also hope to pick up the pace on posts here, shooting for one a week. I didn’t want to talk about any of this before because I just didn’t know what to say – how can you get your arms around a problem if you don’t know what it is?

Happily, my new au pair (arriving this month) is very focused on healthy eating, so she will fit right into my changed household. As I have ramped up that part of my diet and eliminated other foods, even my kids are getting into the act. More about that on a later post.

Thanks again for reading!

-Anne Marie

P.S. Will respond soon to any recent comments I’ve missed!

Are You Going to Cry?

A friend recently asked me if I am going to cry when our au pair of two years leaves in a few weeks. I realized that I hadn’t thought about it, but the first thing that popped into my head was, “Well, yes, of course I am going to cry. Why wouldn’t I cry?” Maybe it won’t be in front of her, but I will cry for sure. I may already be crying when I get to the end of this post.

She shoveled our driveway this morning with all the snow, you know? She did it because she said that’s what we should do for each other. I try to make it up to her one way or another, but she does it because she’s a mensch (a person of integrity), not to curry favor or out of any sense of obligation. I was at work already when the snow started, my husband was out of town, and she wanted to help out. She wanted to contribute to the family. She knows she is part of our family. With us, this isn’t just au pair program brochure bullshit. She knows that our house is her house, and our lives will never be the same for having been touched by her. Pretty soon, she will not be our au pair, she will be an honorary Aunt, who happens to live far away but loves you just the same.

I use the Yiddish word “mensch” on purpose because, you see, our au pair is a Bosnian Muslim. We first were a bit nervous that she may not want to match with a Jewish family. Her application actually said she had “no religion”, but knowing something about geography we knew enough to ask. She said, “Well, I am Muslim.” And then paused to hear what I would say. I said, “Good, well, I want my children to grow up in a world where Jews and Muslims can get along, so where better to start than at home?”

I meant it. And I continue to mean it. One day my children will meet someone who says all Muslims are the same, and they will say, “No way. You have no idea what you are talking about. How many have you ever known like they are your own?”

My children cling to her. They come running and screaming when they see her. They can hardly imagine a day without her, yet they know the end is approaching. The goodbyes do not begin on the last day. They take at least a month. Rather than awkward, distanced moments as some adults use to deal with impending separation, children hang on. They give it their all, soaking up every last moment of beauty and comfort and joy and tickling and love and … Emina.

OK, now I am really crying. It will not be the last time.

Emina, we love you. Without end.

Her First Time

Do you remember what your first time was like? Your first time hiring a nanny, babysitter or au pair, I mean. You were probably nervous as hell about leaving your child home alone with someone else. How was it all going to work? Would you be able to handle it? What if you forgot something? You may have left laborious notes about where you were going to be, what to do in an emergency, etc. and then called home every half hour just to see if things were going right.

Months or even years later, you are now in the position to welcome another au pair to your home. She may be your second, third or fifth au pair. You may have had good experiences or rotten ones. But remember – she probably hasn’t had any encounters with American families and has never been in an au pair program. She has childcare experience, but in a very different context. She also may have never used a microwave, dishwasher or garbage disposal before. In all these aspects and more, it’s her first time.

Some au pairs are visibly nervous about coming to the U.S. or starting their au pair jobs. Others think or say they are fine, but the nerves come out in other ways. (Like our au pair who kept having “accidents” when she first arrived. She’s been great ever since.) The best thing you can do as a host parent is to simply be aware of the situation. There’s really nothing you can do to make the nerves go away, and you don’t want to cater to them either, as you just may make it worse.

I have spoken elsewhere on this blog – and most au pair agencies will tell you – that having an au pair handbook helps smooth the process. Having something special in the au pair’s room, even a small welcome basket of toiletries, will also make her feel at home. Some families also make welcome cards or signs for the new au pair.

I like to tell our new au pairs that they can call their family as soon as they arrive (or after relaxing for a while) and then have some quiet time, unless they want to be with us right away. I know that they have been waiting for months for their first day to arrive, then anxiously awaiting the training to finish so they could move from their hotel accommodations into the room they will occupy for the next year. Au pairs also generally have a lot of anxiety about the family with whom they have matched – will the family be as welcoming in person as on the phone? Did they get into a good situation?

Once these fears have calmed – which may even be on the first day – and the culture shock has worn off a bit, your au pair should be ready for what the year brings.

Upcoming Posts on Your Old Au Pair vs. Your New Au Pair and When Your Kids Say They Don’t Want a New Au Pair

Au Pair Transitions

The biggest difference between au pairs and nannies, I would say, is the fact that transitions are part and parcel of the experience. If a nanny leaves a family, it generally means either that the relationship didn’t work out or that someone’s circumstances have changed (either the family’s or the nanny’s). With au pairs, however, they come to the U.S. on a short term visa – which can be up to two years – and then their time is done.

In the last few weeks, I have mentioned to friends from time to time that our au pair is leaving soon. “Oh my gosh,” they often say. “What are you going to do!?!” I calmly respond that we are getting a new au pair. “Well, her time is up,” I add. “We knew that it was going to happen.”

Of course, it isn’t as simple as all that – it is not as easy to change au pairs as to change a pair of clothes – but transitions are a part of life. People move to new towns, students move from grade to grade and families match with new au pairs. If a family unit is strong and the children feel loved and supported, they can be bolstered by the experience.

Here are some thoughts about easing the transition:

1) Leave enough time to introduce the new person to your home and life. Don’t expect that she will know everything. Remember, you have done this before, but she never has.

2) Have full expectations that your new au pair will be different than the old one. She will like different foods, keep different hours and have different strengths and weaknesses. There will be things that you will miss about your old au pair, but there will also likely be positive aspects of the new person, especially if you are open to them.

3) Don’t worry if your kids say they don’t want a new au pair. I don’t mean that you shouldn’t address their concerns or ease their fears, you should. But don’t worry. Things have a way of working themselves out if you simply let them.

More on this topic to come…

The Flip Side of Guilt: Gratitude

I had an entirely different post planned in my head than the one I am about to write. The post I envisioned referred to Caitlin Knight’s comment to my “I Feel Guilty for Having an Au Pair” post. I had already thought about discussing how the flip side of guilt is gratitude, and I wanted to work in some of her contributions. Yet I don’t have time for the post I had planned, and if I don’t write something now, I may not get time to post anything, and I will not be able to look back on this day and remember how I felt.

Each moment of my life is earmarked for something over the next few days – some of it simply earmarked as “spend time with my family” – but reserved nonetheless, so I may not post again until next week.

On this post, the gratitude I want to discuss is gratitude about how our au pair – and the au pair program generally – fills in the gap. You know the gap I mean. When mom can’t get to everything, and dad can’t either. So, with that long introduction, here goes my post:

I am entirely too busy to write this post. I felt as though I barely had time to breathe this morning (not literally, of course). From the moment I arrived at the office – about four hours ago – until I took a break to grab some lunch, I have been busy. Sending emails, answering calls, checking voicemails, revising contracts, sitting in meetings, doing other lawyer-type stuff. Because Thanksgiving is approaching and year end is around the corner, everyone wants everything done now.

It’s funny, the other job at which I was as busy as I am sometimes now was back when I used to sell shoes during summers and school breaks in college. I needed to hustle up and down the stairs, remembering numerous different sizes, styles and colors – that one is code 5627 on the second floor and that is code 4912 in the back of the first floor, and that one we sold out of all the size 8s already, etc. – then run out to the shoppers and line them all up in the correct order, smiling all the while. At least back then, the worst I could do was bring the wrong shoes!

So, my sense of gratitude is ….

I am grateful that this morning when the school nurse called to say that my son needed to go home because he was complaining of a sore throat that – in the midst of all of this chaos and my own complaints of coughing, a headache and the accompanying lack of sleep - I did not need to run over to his school and pick him up. That means that I didn’t need to drop everything I was doing, risk annoying my colleagues, blow deadlines and try to finish whatever I could later … later when? There is no convenient “later” when it’s two days before Thanksgiving.

Being a good host mom (or at least I try), I called my husband first to see if he could get my son from school rather than spring more hours on our au pair last minute. He was on a conference call that was scheduled to last another hour.

Being a great au pair, when I did call her, my au pair picked up her cell phone right away and said that “of course she could go pick up my son from school, and what else did I need?”

You know those Mastercard commercials where they talk about all the money you spend on different things and then the last bit about how the satisfaction you get after the investment is priceless….? That’s what my au pair’s words meant to me this morning. “What else do you need? How else can I help?” It makes all of the minor complaints I have about the simple realities of hosting an au pair – number one being the lack of privacy of having someone live in your home – pale in comparison. What nanny would be available on a moment’s notice? (Not one I could afford.) What grandma, even? (Not ours, who are great and helpful but certainly don’t wait by the phone for me to call – not that I would want that either!)

I dare say that without an au pair - given my life circumstances – I wouldn’t be sitting in the office chair I am in today. There are too many of these unforeseen events, even if “too many” means only three or four a year. Murphy’s Law being intact, they always fall exactly when we are least available to deal with them.

Finally, if I wasn’t in this chair, it would mean one less mommy lawyer to be there for all the young women professional hopefuls in the world, looking at us old hats to try to figure out how to do it all. (Not that I have completely figured it out, but I do OK.) I consider this an important part of my contribution to the world – acting as a mentor and guide where I can. It’s a big part of why I write this blog.

So thanks to my au pair and thanks to the au pair program. I am truly grateful.

Time for a quick break – and then back to my busy day!

End to the post that was not what I expected but is what it is.

Happy Thanksgiving, all. Thanks for reading.

Should You Host an Au Pair with a Newborn?

This post is for my friend Andie, and anyone else who has ever wondered if she should host an au pair who would care for her newborn baby. If you are new to this blog, I am NOT an au pair expert, and I don’t work for any agency. I’m simply a mom – one who has hosted au pairs for the last six years.

Here are my thoughts:

1) If you are a new parent – in other words, if this is your first child – and you don’t have extensive experience with newborns, I would definitely not match with an au pair during this time. Let’s face it, babies are very complicated. They keep you up at all hours of the night. Once you figure out how they work, they grow and change. In your ensuing loss of sleep and trying to get ahead of the 8-ball, you are not in the right frame of mind to break someone in who may not even know which tap in your faucet is hot and which is cold. This is less about whether an au pair is capable of taking care of your child, and more about whether you are in the frame of mind to train and teach someone at this stage of your life, while you are still figuring things out this parenting thing yourself.

2) If you ignore my advice in #1 – which is your prerogative, of course! – or if you are hiring for an au pair to care for a newborn who is your second or third child or are already really familiar with newborns, then an au pair may make sense. In that case, I would make absolutely sure that the au pair has extensive experience not only with children but also with children of the exact same age as your child will be when she arrives. Knowing how to care for a six-month-old is not the same as caring for a newborn. Also, make sure that her experience is not only in a daycare center, where she may have been one among many teachers, but also as a primary caregiver for a child. Ask her all the important questions about feeding, bathing, etc.

3) If you know that you plan to have an au pair once your newborn arrives, I would plan for her to arrive a little early (maybe a month, if you can afford it) and start caring for your older child(ren). This way, she will already be familiar with everything in your house and town, and you will be used to having an au pair in the house, when the big event happens. She will also be able to help your older child(ren) with the transition.

4) Finally, we had an au pair when my daughter was born. She was with us while I was pregnant, and she developed a hugely protective attitude toward me. Thankfully, she had gained a lot of experience with a newborn by caring for her sister’s child. She made the process much easier, and a lot of the time I would have her work during the day just so I could catch up on my sleep! She also had the energy to play with my son – the big brother – at the times when I was just too worn out to be running around with him. Although there are some limits on how au pairs can work with newborns (i.e., you cannot leave them alone with a baby under three months of age), the benefits of having live-in help may more than make up for any inconvenience.

I was initially very nervous about the idea of having an au pair with a newborn. I was so afraid about the idea of having such a tiny little baby in the arms of someone I had never met. Fortunately, the au pair I mention above was extremely calm and capable, and from the moment I met her I knew she would do a great job. Again, the key is to interview well, and remember that if your instincts are telling you – after someone’s arrival – that she is not the right person, you can always look for another match.

Please Get Diapers

One of the best parts of having an au pair….