Hi Hattiel
Just coming back to you about your question on male au-pairs. I've just had one. I employed him quite by accident, thinking that he was a girl (the name wasn't obvious, and I hadn't looked at his photo). At first, my immediate reaction was to think "I'm going to have to tell him he can't have the job", but then afterwards, I thought, well, I liked him well enough when I thought he was a girl, so why not now that I know he's a boy?
I got him to get references and a police check.
There was one downside to him being a boy: as he's 21 and gorgeous, and I'm a lone parent, everyone assumed he was my toy boy. At first this was quite amusing, but afterwards became extremely irritating!
Other than that, there weren't really any problems which I wouldn't have possibly had with a girl. He was very good with the children, very pro-active and they loved him. He was also extremely useful, because as well as keeping the house clean and tidy, he did things that I can't do, like putting up shelves.
I have heard from other people that Eastern European male au-pairs are sexist and awful, coming from a culture which has yet to experience a healthy dose of feminism, and I certainly found at first that when he wasn't actually on duty, it wasn't second nature for him to clear up after himself, but he soon got the hang of it!
The other thing is, because cleaning, etc., wasn't something he was expected to do at home, it meant he did it my way, the way I showed him. With my previous au-pair, a girl, she did it her way, which wasn't the way I wanted it done.
I've had such a good experience with him, that I'm about to get another au-pair; the brother of my previous (female) au-pair. On that point, just because an au-pair wants to move families doesn't mean s/he is a bad au-pair. I had to get rid of her because DS didn't get on with her, and also because she slightly irritated me, but that wasn't her fault. (I did it very diplomatically, hence us still keeping in touch and me now being about to get her brother as an au-pair.)
HTH