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The author of Maid finally hires one

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April 14, 2025

IN THE SIX YEARS SINCE I PUBLISHED MAID, ALMOST every person who’s interviewed me has asked me the same question: Do I, a person who became kind of famous for writing about cleaning people’s houses, have a house cleaner myself?

- STEPHANIE LAND

The author of Maid finally hires one

The simple answer was no. But it was not because my house was already spotless. Far from it. The truth was, I just couldn’t bring myself to do it.

When I worked as a house cleaner, I spent hours dusting rooms with objects valuable enough to pay for a week’s worth of groceries I desperately needed. Everything I polished carried an invisible price tag with an obscene amount of money that had been spent. Receipts left on countertops for dry cleaning listed totals that were more than what I had paid for my car. A lot of the rooms I cleaned weren't even used regularly, so it became my job to dust closed-off spaces bigger than the studio apartment I lived in.

I worked for 9 bucks an hour, and my take-home pay was about 6. While the wages allowed me to barely survive, the work itself seemed so wasteful and unnecessary that I started to feel that way about myself. My clients were pleasant for the most part, but a handful of them weren't. Regardless, a power imbalance weighed on me whenever I had to get on my hands and knees to clean the floors and toilets. To hire a house cleaner myself would mean not only putting someone in that position, where they, too, might feel worthless, but also becoming someone I used to hate.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Time

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THE NEW GOLD RUSH

Driven by a changing global order, the new clamor for gold brings ready cash, and deadly costs

time to read

12 mins

October 27, 2025

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Nearly half of those held by ICE faced no criminal charges

WHEN PRESIDENT DONALD Trump launched his reelection campaign, he vowed to deport \"the worst of the worst\" while blaming migrants for bringing \"crime, drugs, misery and death\" to the U.S. And since he took office for his second term, a wave of public and sometimes violent arrests by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers have taken place across the country.

time to read

1 mins

October 27, 2025

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A knife's-edge nuclear drama

SOMETIMES MOVIES REACH US IN A PLACE beyond mere assessment: you walk away from the thing you’ve just seen not really knowing if you'd call it good or bad, but you know something has shifted inside you.

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The Risk Report

ARGENTINA'S PRESIDENT JAVIER Milei, a man who's enjoyed extraordinary success with a “move-fast-and-break-things” approach to politics and economic policy, is starting to look a lot more vulnerable. And at an inconvenient moment, with the approach of the country's Oct. 26 midterm elections, which could mark the beginning of the end for Milei and his reform efforts.

time to read

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WHY BABY BOXES ARE SUDDENLY EVERYWHERE

Devices to help parents anonymously surrender an infant are spreading across the U.S.—stirring emotions, and debate

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October 27, 2025

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NEW OPIOID ON THE BLOCK

Amid crackdowns on fentanyl, a potent and less detectable alternative emerges

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3 mins

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The story I lived to tell

FOR ISRAEL'S HOSTAGES, AS FOR THE WORLD, OCT. 7 WAS ONLY THE BEGINNING

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12 mins

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5 symptoms foot doctors say you should never ignore

If you want to take a step toward better health, see a foot doctor.

time to read

3 mins

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Mining the origins of a showbiz family

BEN STILLER DIDN'T WANT TO INSERT HIMSELF INTO HIS documentary Stiller & Meara: Nothing Is Lost.

time to read

4 mins

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THE ROBOT IN YOUR KITCHEN

A DOZEN OR SO YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN, EYES obscured by VR headsets, shuffle around a faux kitchen in a tech company's Silicon Valley headquarters. Their arms are bent at the elbows, palms facing down.

time to read

11 mins

October 27, 2025

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