I had my visa interview on January 8, 2024, and arrived in the United States on February 16. I only stayed with one client.
Self-introduction:
I am from Zhijiang, Hunan. I took early retirement from an educational institution in 2012. In October 2012, I started working as a maternity matron and childcare nanny, and I also studied home organization and various related skills. In the families I serve, I am an understanding auntie who notices what needs to be done and helps put your mind at ease. In 2022, I did vocational training in my city in China. I am proficient in every stage of a baby’s growth (including care for low-birth-weight babies and twins), introducing solid foods and understanding their needs, and I can cook tasty northern and southern Chinese dishes as well as flour-based breakfasts. I have worked in a postpartum care center in the U.S. as a maternity matron and cook. My cooking is light but flavorful, and I will definitely not disappoint you.
Work experience:
From 2012 to 2014, I worked in Huaihua, Hunan as a maternity matron and childcare nanny.
In March 2015, I cared for a baby in Chongwenmen, Beijing, whose family had returned from the U.S., for one year.
In May 2016, I cared for a premature baby and twin babies in Tongzhou, Beijing.
In February 2018, I cared for a surrogate baby in the Qiantang River villa area of Hangzhou until the lunar new year.
In December 2019, I returned home for the Spring Festival.
At the beginning of 2020, when the pandemic started, I rested at home.
From May 2021 to October 2023, I did vocational training at Huaihua Medical College in Hunan.
At the end of 2023, I prepared for my U.S. visa.
On February 16, 2024, I came to the U.S. to work as a maternity matron.
In mid-May 2024, I worked in the San Francisco Bay Area as a maternity matron for two months.
In July 2024, I worked in New York as a maternity matron for two months.
On September 8, 2024, I cared for a baby from a Chinese-American family in Irvine, Los Angeles, for one month.
In November 2024, I worked as a maternity matron in Arcadia, Los Angeles, and extended the job until the baby was 6 months old.
In June 2025, I got a U.S. driver’s license.
In July, I had a physical exam.
In August, I worked as a maternity matron for 30 days at Three Mantou in San Francisco.
In October, I worked as a maternity matron in San Francisco until December 16.
In the process of caring for babies, I always focus mainly on building a foundation for growth. Prevention is more important than treatment. I pay close attention to babies’ development and growth, using the five major developmental areas in childcare as the foundation, and carefully observe each stage of a baby’s growth and development. If I discover a problem, I inform the parents and provide solutions. Gross motor development and language perception are very important stages, and every step of training must not be missed. A baby’s language training, fine motor skills, gross motor skills, and social abilities are all closely related to the parent-child activities carried out by the childcare nanny and family members. I will use all my lifelong energy to take good care of your baby.