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Hope's avatar

Money. If you pay enough to make it worth the babysitter's while, the cost of a night out is so high that even if you can afford it, that's pressure, and pressure is no fun.

P*rn. I don't want any of that on our WiFi, even for a curious teenager.

Values. A girl could have good internal values yet speak the language of public school, and could upend a lot of parental hard work with a few age inappropriate comments. Teenagers are learning too and like fish they might not see the water they swim in.

At the end of the day though, it comes down to that no social event is worth risking child abuse. Any sort of babysitter there would be a ramping up of trust and responsibility over time, not to meet an artificial deadline like a particular social event.

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Emily's avatar

Love this post. Finding childcare has been the hardest thing for us as parents. We have gone out maybe 4 times in the past year. Our families are too busy and / or far away to help regularly. Babysitters are truly expensive — minimum wage has increased 200% in 20 years, while inflation for that period is about 70%.

We’ve had decent luck with a paid membership to an app that vets caregivers — we then do phone and in-person interviews and a trial date with one of us home before hiring them. And a lot of praying and trusting, as Simon mentioned.

There are girls we love at both churches we attend, but one is a mission and one is a monastery, so there’s a much larger radius of attendees and it would require hours of driving. Younger girls need transportation, too — that’s one reason they don’t sit as much anymore. And, in our experience, Gen Z doesn’t value work as much as other priorities, so cancelations are common.

In 20 years of teaching high school, I’ve found exactly one student I would trust with my children. She’s amazing. And she graduates in a few weeks. So, back to square one!

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