{"id":3415,"date":"2015-11-04T11:45:00","date_gmt":"2015-11-04T11:45:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.theparentsocial.com\/?p=3415"},"modified":"2020-11-09T21:57:42","modified_gmt":"2020-11-09T21:57:42","slug":"childrenandcareer","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparentsocial.com\/childrenandcareer\/","title":{"rendered":"Career & Motherhood: What’ll I Be When I Grow Up?"},"content":{"rendered":"
My eldest daughter often talks about what she might be when she grows up. It changes regularly. Her potential career varies greatly ranging from running her own beauty salon or being an artist through to being a chef or a doctor (she saw a news report about Alzheimers and was particularly concerned about it so wanted to find a cure). However, my overall response is that she can be whatever she wants to be. This is what my mum said to me and I believe it to be true for my daughter.<\/p>\n
She is bright and hugely enthusiastic about pretty much everything. I’m sure she’ll be afforded many opportunities as well as creating her own. I was an extremely enthusiastic child, allegedly fairly bright, and was definitely given the encouragement and means to pursue whatever I wanted.<\/p>\n
The problem is, I don’t think I ever truly figured out what I wanted to be when I grew up. I was interested in the media and English, which led to a\u00a0 humanities degree incorporating media studies and linguistics. Then came a 14-year career in PR. These seemed like good choices. However, I don’t think it was what I ever really envisaged myself doing. I don’t believe it was my true vocation.<\/p>\n
I loved crime dramas\/fiction when I was much younger and fancied myself as a bit of a Nancy Drew or female Columbo. Then more recently a Detective Superintendent Stella Gibson or DC\u00a0Dinah Kowalski.\u00a0I think detective work would have suited my tenacious, inquisitive, investigative nature well. At one point I was extremely interested in the idea of forensic linguistics. However, for some reason I didn’t really think it was a realistic choice. I also questioned the viability of a career as a scriptwriter when I became interested in that.\u00a0<\/p>\n
My mum died whilst I was in my final year at university. She knew me better than I know\/knew myself and I genuinely think she’d have suggested (definitely not in a pushy way) something and I would have had an epiphany moment. She would certainly have nurtured and encouraged anything I was toying with – scriptwriting and detective work for example.<\/p>\n
Now my issue is that motherhood has fundamentally changed me. I work (and enjoy working), but I don’t want to work full-time and, dare I say it, I now lack the ambition and perhaps the confidence for a complete change of direction. Again, I think my mum would have helped me here. I sometimes feel like I’ve missed the boat. Although \u00a0I’m not actually sure what type of boat that was and where it was going.<\/p>\n
However – and this is a BIG however – if I hadn’t chosen the path I did, I would have missed out on a lot of fun, travel, friends and experiences; I wouldn’t have met my wonderful husband and had our three amazing children.<\/p>\n
I’m still working on that winning Dragon’s Den idea though…<\/p>\n
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