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It's Friday - what do/did your kids think you do for a living?
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A chance question from my granddaughter prompted me to remember a similar query from her mother...
I had just started out in H&S with the Gas Industry & brought home the standards pieces of PPE kit.
My daughter stood & watched me opening it all out, but said nothing.
At school, the following day, the teacher asked everybody what their parents did for a living; my daughter thought for a little while & announced that "I'm not sure, but I think he washes the gas vans....!"
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Thanks for that at end of a bad week brought a smile to my face :)
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Don't consultants borrow a clients watch then tell them the time and then charge them for the service then go home and spend the rest of their day counting their money?
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My 4 year old told me I was a doctor because I have a lot of first aid training gear and work in a hospital.
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When asked by her primary school teacher what do your parents do at work one of my daughters replied- " Dad spends his days in the pub". I was working for a brewery at the time and spending a lot of time visiting pubs across the north of England.
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Really looking forward to asking the Grand-kids what they think I do.....
Response will be posted :-)
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I wonder if Schools still ask these sort of questions these days?
The purpose of asking that question in class (along with the "what we did in our holidays" essay) had little to do with curriculum and more to do with establishing social classification, class groupings, etc.
As you say, our children's perception of what we do is often very different from reality, but then that can be true of Teachers too.
My children would proudly tell their Teacher that their Dad was an Engineer. I had several enjoyable parents evenings correcting teacher's preconceived notions that an 'Engineer' meant a spanner-wielding, boiler-suited mechanic, as opposed (in my case) to a designer of cutting-edge aircraft systems.
Best in any event to leave the youngsters with their own perceptions. I took my own Son to an open day at my workplace and he was crushingly disappointed that there were no aeroplanes to be seen (we only made the avionic systems).
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I think my son has probably got a fairly good idea of what I do for a living. I'm just not so sure what he does?
He spends more time in uniform away from home as a cadet than I did as a regular! they've even given him a medal! ;-)
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I'm with the Blue one on this.
Whilst I'm pretty sure my kids grasped what I did when they were younger, I am largely mystified as to what it is that they do all day to earn their living, one at least earning significantly more than me I'm delighted to say.
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My son once told his teacher that I worked at the factory "where they make the clouds". In reality a large plant with extensive steam service pipes but when you looked at it from outside it did indeed look like we were making clouds:-)
On the other hand I once joked that we were eating lion chops rather than loin chops. Imagine my face when a teacher asked me at the next parents evening whether we really did eat lion regularly!
I, of course, assured her "only once a month as it is so expensive".
p48
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I don't think they've grasped what I do but they know I earn around £1,000,000.00 per year doing it!
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As those of us without kids/offspring (or 'issue', the term used in posh obituaries) will somehow struggle to answer the question posed by this thread's title, perhaps it could be extended to include misperceptions by friends and relatives.
Also, though the title includes the name Friday, it isn't followed by the word 'thread' - so hopefully there is a good chance that this thread will remain open rather than be locked tomorrow or shortly thereafter!
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David Bannister wrote:one at least earning significantly more than me I'm delighted to say.
Ahh, retirement beckons !!
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One year ago my son aged 14 at the time, asked me for some information about what I used to do when I was a fireman, this for a power point presentation he was doing for homework.
I gave him some old pictures of me in my uniform and also some fire pictures I have and off he went and made his presentation.
After he had presented to his class he gave me a copy on a memory stick and it brought me to tears.
The presentation was entitle My Hero and he wrote about how dangerous it is to be a firefighter and how brave I was.
There you go, how's that for a post on the Friday thread.
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Firesafety101 wrote:One year ago my son aged 14 at the time, asked me for some information about what I used to do when I was a fireman, this for a power point presentation he was doing for homework.
I gave him some old pictures of me in my uniform and also some fire pictures I have and off he went and made his presentation.
After he had presented to his class he gave me a copy on a memory stick and it brought me to tears.
The presentation was entitle My Hero and he wrote about how dangerous it is to be a firefighter and how brave I was.
There you go, how's that for a post on the Friday thread.
Sounds like a great kid, no doubt you have equal pride in him.
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For a period of about 6 months I wrote articles for one of the safety magazines ( the subscription services many of us use for updates - no names here of course folks ).
I would rise after the kids went to school and write for a couple of hours. After lunch I hit the sofa with a good book. Bliss.
However, it gave the wrong impression as my kids only ever saw me stretched out after school.
I overheard a friend ask my daughter "what does your dad do?" followed by the one word, terse reply "couch".
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Some days I have difficulty answering that question myself. I am dreading asking my kids when I get home tonight.
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I worked away from home that often that when asked [I was working on the new Lancaster gaol at the time] of my girls [she was ~5 at the time] said ' I do not know as dad is not at home but I think that he is in prison' - this was taken wrongly for quite a while!
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Slightly digressing - I'm sure there will be other parents who have been written about with the remark "My dad never gets a bath".
Hopefully you will all realise that I have a shower or two every day?
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It's Friday - what do/did your kids think you do for a living?
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