People tell you that having children is the hardest job in the world.
After raising a six-year-old son and a two-year-old daughter, I can tell you they are wrong.
It is about fifty of the hardest jobs in the world.
If there were a course you could undertake in parenting, it may take a while to complete. I’ve calculated 38 years should cover some of the basics. The following professional degrees, apprenticeships and courses may prepare you for the abundant skill set and knowledge that the job can entail. Parenting forces you out of your comfort zone with challenges that are so far-reaching that you never knew how mega smart you would have to be (on so little sleep).
Here are some areas of expertise that comprise the multi-talented, modern-day genius, otherwise known as a parent.
1. Teacher – Four years.
Not just the school subjects such as literacy and numeracy. Your fielding all kinds of curly questions. Where do babies come from? Why do people live? Why is there a cannon on a pirate ship? How many seconds are there in a year? Life is made up of so many complex concepts – and you have to explain them all in an accessible manner. They are curious little beings and a ‘teaching moment’ is just about every moment.
2. Doctor – Six years.
You are called upon to be able to assess a range of different health issues, from scraped knees to, god forbid, something more serious. It would be beneficial to be able to diagnose your own kid with knowledge and expertise.
3. Police Officer – One year.
STOP! FREEZE! Having to police everything from what they are doing in the real world and their online safety is a main factor in the parent skill set. Add on one-year of specialist training for police negotiating skills. As they grow, you may have to police the more serious issues, as risk-taking behaviour increases during adolescence.
Top Comments
Ah, the irony of starting out this rubbish with the heading "Teacher"... and then showing you don't know the difference between your and you're! It doesn't get much better from there really. Y'know what people? Don't get A-grades at school, go to University and get a degree then work your way up to your chosen career... just pop out a kid and you'll be qualified in no time! Seriously, this is probably the most stupid drivel I've read since "Your Dog is Not Your Baby"!!!!!
I'm a public high school year 7-12 teacher. I teach 150 students every year (I enjoy it, and I'm not complaining: I wouldn't chose anything else). My Dad is a GP. Both jobs are draining and require a lot of study. The skills you mentioned above are fairly simple. I don't doubt being a parent is extremely hard and exhausting, but you don't need to justify yourself and in the process patronize other jobs. Furthermore, being in the police would likely be an extremely hard and at times life-endangering job. Though I'm also aware this was intended as a light-hearted piece so we should all just chill out :)