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The day begins before it should, and every minute is squandered, before I jump into the car, spilling hot coffee in my haste. Then the rushing wind blows past me, running through my hair in the dark; headlights keep up with the sharp turns, and the thumping stereo lifts me. Parking, on time, walking briskly to ensure the grandest entrance to give a formal impression. My echoed greeting meets my ears. Hello, goodbye, I take over, holding my vigilant station as I toast bagels with butter and wait for them to call me up. "Ashley!" comes the petulant cry and I manage to answer her. "Coming!" And I take a slow sip before heading up creaky stairs. They want me to pick out their clothes. They want me to help them get dressed. I say, "You can do that yourself, I'm here to do hard things, like cook." Teasing, admonishing, waiting for children to do what I asked; I take one more sip of coffee and the cup is gone far too soon. Soon, they are eating their breakfast, and I'm prepping backpacks and coats. Something spills, and I clean it up; then she says she forgot her shoes. I tell her sister to get them, but she won't go up there alone. So we three climb the creaky stairs, and come back with their socks and shoes. We run out the door, lock the garage, and jump in my car for a ride. "Seatbelts?" I ask before leaving, and they both ask me for tic-tacs. A minute away, and I park. They jump out and both wave goodbye. I smile and wait for the school bus. I drive to my next job, next door.
0
Mar 26, 2018
Mar 26, 2018 at 1:28 PM UTC
Job
The day begins before it should, and every minute is squandered, before I jump into the car, spilling hot coffee in my haste. Then the rushing wind blows past me, running through my hair in the dark; headlights keep up with the sharp turns, and the thumping stereo lifts me. Parking, on time, walking briskly to ensure the grandest entrance to give a formal impression. My echoed greeting meets my ears. Hello, goodbye, I take over, holding my vigilant station as I toast bagels with butter and wait for them to call me up. "Ashley!" comes the petulant cry and I manage to answer her. "Coming!" And I take a slow sip before heading up creaky stairs. They want me to pick out their clothes. They want me to help them get dressed. I say, "You can do that yourself, I'm here to do hard things, like cook." Teasing, admonishing, waiting for children to do what I asked; I take one more sip of coffee and the cup is gone far too soon. Soon, they are eating their breakfast, and I'm prepping backpacks and coats. Something spills, and I clean it up; then she says she forgot her shoes. I tell her sister to get them, but she won't go up there alone. So we three climb the creaky stairs, and come back with their socks and shoes. We run out the door, lock the garage, and jump in my car for a ride. "Seatbelts?" I ask before leaving, and they both ask me for tic-tacs. A minute away, and I park. They jump out and both wave goodbye. I smile and wait for the school bus. I drive to my next job, next door.
Work as a nanny, it's not for everyone, but I love my girls.
ashley-somebody
Written by
29/F/Indonesian
Mar 26, 2018
Mar 26, 2018 at 1:28 PM UTC
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