Real job… what is a “real job”
anyway? I mean, does flipping burgers at a fast food restaurant count as a real
job? Or is a “real job” being labeled with something considered important like
a Doctor, a Therapist, or a Teacher? But what if a “real job” is defined by how
much money you make? There are doctors, therapists, and teachers who find
themselves not making much money at all, do they still qualify as having a
“real job” simply because of the title? Or is a “real job” something you have
to go to college for? Because if that’s the case, as I mention in my earlier
post The College Question, there are several necessary jobs that don’t require
going to college and some of them pay quite well. So what is it? What is it
that makes one job a “real job” versus another that’s considered a waste of
time or a stepping stone to the real thing?
When someone asks when I’m going to
get a “real job” what they don’t understand is that I do, in fact, have a real
job. It just might not meet their qualifications of what a “real Job” is which,
as mentioned above, I still don’t know what would even qualify anyway… I am a swim instructor. I am also a writer, the House Keeping Manager
at a Victorian Bed & Breakfast, I freehand crochet little animals, and I
help clean and organize for several people. For the purpose of this blog post I
will focus on my being a swim instructor. It is my most steady job, as it was
my first job, and I am still doing it several years later and don’t plan to
stop anytime soon.
To be a swim instructor I didn’t
need to go to college, but I did have to take a course (while going to
college.) I don’t have to go to school for years on end, but to be good at my
job I have to keep learning new ways to teach year after year. There may have
been times I didn’t have consistent work, but everyone I know has been out of
work at one time or another. I may not get paid a ton, but, once I found
someone to work for who pays me what I’m worth, I get paid quite well for
something I enjoy doing and the time I put into it. I’m not a teacher, a
doctor, or a therapist, often times I’m all three at once.
Like a teacher I have to make
lesson plans, deal with trouble students, or change my whole plan because that
one kid who never pays attention is actually focused today so we’re covering as
much as possible. With a normal three hour block of lessons I could be teaching
as many as 50 plus kids in one night in three or more different levels and
actually remember all of their names, what they’re good at, and what they need
work on. I can keep a whole class of 7-12 year old's under control by myself.
And every single one of those kids learns differently and I need to know how to
modify my teaching to accommodate them.
In addition to being a swim
instructor I am also a lifeguard, something else I had to take a class for and keep
my certification up to date. In being a lifeguard I am certified in first aid
and CPR and need to know how to help someone if they have a problem in the
water. Thankfully I haven’t had to deal with any more than a few scrapes or a
bumped head when a kid wasn’t paying attention to where they were going, but I
am trained in what to do if there is a problem.
While teaching kids how to swim you
would be amazed how many times I had to play therapist rather than swim
instructor. Figuring out new ways to get them excited about swimming rather
than scared, figuring out why they are afraid and helping them through it. One
kid actually, quite by accident, called me his Life Coach once (you may
remember I wrote a blog post about it) and it certainly is the case quite often.
But it applies more so to when I teach adults and autistic kids. Adults who
don’t know how to swim are usually afraid of the water for some reason and sometimes
it takes a lot of digging, encouragement, and patience to get to the bottom of
the issue. Autistic kids usually just need help getting out of their own way. I
am happy to say I’ve had more success than failures with both challenges.
I don’t know if my job qualifies as
a “real job” or not. I know it makes me happy, I know it’s a gift God has given
me, I know it’s a job God has called me to have. In the end that’s all that
really matters isn’t it? In the end I don’t really have a say in the matter
anyway, it’s what God is calling me to do so I do it. God doesn’t call us all
to have “real jobs,” some of us are called to be the writers, the artists, the
swim instructors. And that’s ok. It is for me anyway. So no, I don’t have a
“real job” I have many. And I will do my best to glorify God while doing every
single one of them to the best of my ability. That, my friends, is what our
Real Job is after all, regardless of the pay or the job title.