Its a bold move.
One Redditor learned this the hard way after hiring a housekeeper to help her deep clean herhome.
If youre imagining her in a superhero cape, youre not the only one.
But even superheroes need a break.
The cleaner she chose came recommended by someone the OP trusted.
A $400deep cleanfollowed by bi-weekly visits to keep things sparkling.
Seems straightforward, right?
Oh, not so fast.
The housekeeper arrived an hour late, blaming her birthday pancake breakfast with her parents.
Once she started, her cleaning pace could best be described as sloth-like.
They were apparently left to fend for themselves.
But wait, she did unclog a sink in the master bathroom.
Oh, you sweet optimist, no.
That sink would soon take center stage in the kind of drama you only expect fromreality TV.
But then the screenshots started rolling in.
Apparently, this housekeepers second job is a wannabe social media star.
She had plastered pictures of OPs clogged sink all over her Facebook stories, complete with snarky captions.
Im talking zoomed-in shots that screamed, Look at this mess!
Girl, youre being paid to clean it, not roast it.
Listen, I get it.
This wasnt Look at this amazing transformation!it was Look how gross my client is!
Not cool, lady.
Oh, and a revised bill.
The housekeeper decided her half-baked cleaning spree was worth $300 instead of $400.
And honestly, who could blame her?
The drama alone wasnt worth the remaining $100.
Heres the thing: hiring help is supposed to make your life easier, not more stressful.
Its like gifting yourself a little slice of paradise.
You free up your weekends for actual funno more dusting or scrubbing.
Sounds like a win to me!
Posting your clients home online without permission isnt just shady, its straight-up disrespectful and an invasion of privacy.
Luckily for her, the OP wasnt in the mood for a legal mess.
Check out the results: