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Would You Be Okay With Having a Maid?


I like doing my own laundry.

I have cleaned other peoples homes as a job though. I really liked working for most of those people, there were exceptions though. I made some big bucks doing that.





Cynthia, around here a lot of off duty firemen clean windows. You may want to check if they have that there or not.

Cool! Do they wear their uniforms? I have always had a thing for firefighters. As long as they can deal with my 1920s-era double-hung windows.



Hoo boy! I'm calling the Welch Avenue station later--better wait until VEISHEA is over though. The campus springtime lets-all-drink-'til-we're-nearly-dead festival is this week. Oh, BOY. Hope no one gets shot or stabbed this year. (Crosses self, says Hail Mary.)

This, this, this! I would work for Bun anyday. I used to hate it when people left stuff everywhere and expected me to put it all away (and know where it goes) before I could even start cleaning. Then they would bitch about having to pay me for an extra hour of work.
I have a housekeeper (I refuse to call her a "maid") who comes to our house once a week. There's a part of me that feels like I could do the housecleaning, but since my wife and I are frequently busy with work and child-rearing, having our housekeeper come in once a week to clean up our messes certainly helps.


And with my parents...I wish they would get one. They're both elderly and have a difficult time doing it. And they could well afford it, but they refuse (although between getting the kids launched and retirement, they always had someone). I think the problem is because my dad has definite hoarder tendencies and he doesn't want his piles of stuff interfered with. This is also why I don't wade in (plus my sister lives with them and she should be helping)


We have a housekeeper, who's more like a grandmother to me because she's been with our family for so long. But the only things she does is cook, vacuum, and go grocery shopping. All the bathroom cleaning, dusting, mopping, laundry...that's all my job.
Cynthia wrote: "I need to hire someone to do my windows. Last time my window guy was here he saw my John Kerry sign and started on a really long rant about those pro-abortion people and how they were all going to ..."
That seems.....unprofessional.
That seems.....unprofessional.
I would love to have a cleaner come in once or twice a week and do light or heavy cleaning. Whatever cleaning needs to be done. I also would love to have someone come in and do all my windows, thoroughly. Laundry is the least of it; I don't consider laundry terribly onerous. My brother and his wife have a nanny who also does housecleaning - vacuuming, sweeping, kitchen and bathroom cleaning, laundry. But they also do laundry themselves. There's always a load being washed, dried, or folded, and the nanny is only part time so she can't do everything. And if they spill something, they're not going to wait until the nanny gets there the next day to wipe it up, obviously. So they clean as necessary when she's not available.

I guess it's been awhile, eh?

My sprinkler repair guy had Rush Limbaugh's show blasting from his van's radio the entire time he (sprinkler guy) was working.
Ewwww!


Yes it has been a while.


I also worked for a few elderly people who seemed to want me there more for conversation than help with housework, I did feel unbelievably guilty for charging them for my time, so I'd show up on my days off to spend time with them.
I've also worked for people who really didn't need a maid and could've done the work themselves, but they were paying me $15+/ per hour and providing all the supplies, so I wasn't going to complain. Just sayin' :)



With two kids, two dogs and a fulltime job each, it actually gives us time to focus on the kids and eachother when we're not working :-) (and not argue about why my husband doesn't do his share). I do the laundry and he cooks :-)

If I could afford it, I would definitely have a housekeeper, my house is a disaster.


lol, the only time stalking is acceptable.

No list needed. I know what you're saying. That's the main reason I got a divorce.
Heidi Montag's mother worked (is still working?) as a maid.
Darlene Egelhoff, the mother of U.S. reality television personality Heidi Montag, says the recession has forced her to work as a maid. Egelhoff told TV’s “Inside Edition” she and her husband owned a restaurant for 21 years, but had to close it because of the economy. She said they have been struggling to pay their bills since and the only job she could find in Crested Butte, Colo., was cleaning houses.
Darlene Egelhoff, the mother of U.S. reality television personality Heidi Montag, says the recession has forced her to work as a maid. Egelhoff told TV’s “Inside Edition” she and her husband owned a restaurant for 21 years, but had to close it because of the economy. She said they have been struggling to pay their bills since and the only job she could find in Crested Butte, Colo., was cleaning houses.
Attention slobs! How to fake a clean house:
Living room:
# Reserve one side of sofa cushions to be shown to guests. Before company arrives, flip over the cushions to reveal good-as-new fabric. When guests are gone, flip them back.
# Rid the sofa of pet hair by wetting the fingertips of rubber gloves and gliding your hand over the sofa. The hair will stick to the rubber.
# Stack books, catalogs, and magazines in neat piles on the floor or arrange them in a deep decorative basket.
# To disguise windows in need of washing, pull curtain panels closed.
# Fold a clean blanket neatly and drape it over a stained sofa. Strategically placed throw pillows can also camouflage soiled upholstery.
Living room:
# Reserve one side of sofa cushions to be shown to guests. Before company arrives, flip over the cushions to reveal good-as-new fabric. When guests are gone, flip them back.
# Rid the sofa of pet hair by wetting the fingertips of rubber gloves and gliding your hand over the sofa. The hair will stick to the rubber.
# Stack books, catalogs, and magazines in neat piles on the floor or arrange them in a deep decorative basket.
# To disguise windows in need of washing, pull curtain panels closed.
# Fold a clean blanket neatly and drape it over a stained sofa. Strategically placed throw pillows can also camouflage soiled upholstery.
The kitchen:
# When the dishwasher is full and the sink is overflowing, stow dirty dishes and silverware in a stockpot and pull them out later to be cleaned.
# Cover up the lingering aroma of last night’s supper by boiling nutmeg, cloves, or cinnamon and orange peels in a sauce-pan on the stove.
# Declutter the refrigerator by taking down notes, drawings, and magnets and throwing them in a plastic bag. Sort through it later.
# Fold hand towels to hide stains. Two tips: Hang the clean side over the oven handle (with the stains in the back), or roll towels in neat spirals and stack them pyramid-style next to the sink.
# When the dishwasher is full and the sink is overflowing, stow dirty dishes and silverware in a stockpot and pull them out later to be cleaned.
# Cover up the lingering aroma of last night’s supper by boiling nutmeg, cloves, or cinnamon and orange peels in a sauce-pan on the stove.
# Declutter the refrigerator by taking down notes, drawings, and magnets and throwing them in a plastic bag. Sort through it later.
# Fold hand towels to hide stains. Two tips: Hang the clean side over the oven handle (with the stains in the back), or roll towels in neat spirals and stack them pyramid-style next to the sink.
The bathroom:
* Glide a sticky lint roller over the bath mat to pick up hair.
* Light a candle. Everything looks better (and cleaner) by candlelight.
* Hang a fluffy bathrobe on top of damp towels dangling from the hooks on the back of the door.
* Store a rattan or canvas basket on top of the toilet and throw in stray cosmetic brushes.
* Hang fresh guest towels. The humidity in this room makes textiles look droopy, even after a recent machine washing.
* Mound cosmetics and hairstyling products in a container underneath the sink. In a pinch, pile them in the tub and close the shower curtain. Cross your fingers that guests don’t snoop.
* Glide a sticky lint roller over the bath mat to pick up hair.
* Light a candle. Everything looks better (and cleaner) by candlelight.
* Hang a fluffy bathrobe on top of damp towels dangling from the hooks on the back of the door.
* Store a rattan or canvas basket on top of the toilet and throw in stray cosmetic brushes.
* Hang fresh guest towels. The humidity in this room makes textiles look droopy, even after a recent machine washing.
* Mound cosmetics and hairstyling products in a container underneath the sink. In a pinch, pile them in the tub and close the shower curtain. Cross your fingers that guests don’t snoop.
When my mother visits, she wants to do my laundry. I always insist that she NOT do it, as I am an adult and prefer to launder my own delicates. I even sort of enjoy the cycle of renewal that doing the laundry symbolizes (not ironing though). I'm uncomfortable with ANYBODY coming in and cleaning my house. I don't like the idea of them going through my stuff, and I really hate the idea of a human serving me. A robot maid, that would be okay since it's a machine, but not a human. And it's not that I like to clean like my sister, who has this weird compulsion to put everything in order. She alphabetizes her spices and her liquor cabinet.
How about you? Have you ever had a housekeeper/maid? Maybe even a butler? Is the fact that you are paying them enough to mitigate any sort of ambivalence/weirdness of having a servant?