@TheRoadToOmaha
I get what you're saying but he has a whole row of fingerprint bruises on his arm, that's not a little rough. And if it was an accident why didn't she tell us at the time? Also why didn't my son feel able to tell me?
We've made her stay here as enjoyable as possible, she has all her meals with us, she is paid well, she isn't overworked and she meets up with another au pair for walks and takeaway food. We made a big fuss of her birthday, play board games and watch films with her in the evening. My husband takes her out on big walks. I've bought her little gifts and things. I'm not really sure what more we could have done to make her more welcome and look after her.
Nothing. There is nothing more you could've done, but it's just the state the world is in at the moment. Through no fault of your own, you could not have provided her with what she should have been provided as an au pair the past year.
Just to be clear, I blame the agency, not you. They should not have provided au pairs this year when they could not provide the benefits that are supposed to come with the hard work. I fear a lot of these girls will have been sold on the idea that they would provide a certain number of hours work in exchange board so that they could take language classes, socialising and experiencing the culture, but instead they have been locked away inside a strangers house with the children practically 24/7 for no extra pay, being around the adults a lot more than they expected as they work from home, not recieving the usual level of agency or social support they require, and really, just being stranded because there isn't any easy way for them to say 'this isn't for me, I want to go.'
In a different time, different circumstances, she might've been fine, but these are strange times and we're in the midst of a mental health crisis, and this experience is not the one she was expecting.
What I'm saying is, she's probably not a bad person out to hurt your children, just a young girl buckling under the pressure of a bad situation. Forgive her, forgive yourself for allowing her in and trusting her, know your son is going to be fine, and chalk it up to experience.