I run a business and I'm a single mum, so I made a very rational decision to stop trying to be Super Woman and employ a cleaning company to give me a hand. It actually turned out to be a big emotional journey!
My latest guest blog for Work From Home Wisdom is all about the dilemmas involved in making that decision.
Would you employ a cleaner?
Is it OK to employ a cleaner when you work from home?
Jane Binnion has written for us before about working from home as a disabled or chronically ill entrepreneur. In today’s guest post she describes a dilemma you might share.
In my last blog Work in progress I wrote about my plans to employ a cleaner.
Working from home was meant to make the house keeping easier, but who wants to use every coffee and lunch break doing house work?
Being dyspraxic I am a bit of a disaster around the house – don’t get me started on how often I can trip over the vacuum cleaner cable. It takes me an hour to clean one room, or I just wander off and do something more interesting half way through!
But it’s one of my biggest stress points because it’s really important that the house is tidy so that I can find things and don’t trip too often.
To employ a cleaner makes total sense. I regularly outsource various aspects of my work that other people can do better and quicker than me. I have no emotional issues about hiring an accountant, a bookkeeper and someone to do my newsletters. I have a milk man and a window cleaner.
All of those are perfectly rational decisions and I like supporting local traders. Continued
Actually, it turned out to be one of the best decisions I have made, I love it. :)
If this post raises issues for you, please do leave a comment below, I would love to hear your story.
Jane x
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