SouthWestWhippet
Well-Known Member
I currently work part time as a riding instructor, I absolutely love it, I'm good at it, I'm committed to teaching and I would LOVE to do it full time.
But.... if I went full time at my local riding school as an instructor I would have to survive on a salary of abou £6 per hour. Which I really don't think I can do. Consequently, I also have a part time job working for the Council. I hate this job, I suck at it, I am completely demotivated... yet they pay me about £19,500 per annum pro rata.
I just don't understand why it has to be this way. Being a riding instructor is a difficult job to do well, the qualifications required are not easy to achieve - the work is mental, pysical and emotional... so why is it so badly paid?
I look at some of the people around me who have full time office jobs. Yes, they work hard but they have flexi time, holidays and sick pay, sometimes spend time on the internet messing around or emailing mates, and they are paid good salaries with plenty of career progression. They have bought houses (or are saving), drive nice cars, they go out socialising, buy clothes etc have pleasant lives. Yet if I was to go full time doing a job to which I am 100% committed, working long fixed hours, with minimum holiday entitlement, no sick pay, no pension etc etc (all of which I would be prepared to do)... I would basically be trying to survive on minimum wage. I'm a single person, I have no support from my parents so I would not be able to save for a house or get a mortgage, I'd probably have to part with my horse or at least stop competing her. I certainly wouldn't be able to go out socialising with friends.
All the riding instructors I know are married with their other half being the primary bread winner. But in the 21st centuary you can't go into a career on the assumption that you're going to get married soon so money won't be an issue!
Why is that a perfectly respectable career, requiring commitment and qualifications, is out of the question for me finacially unless I want to live in poverty for the rest of my life? It is not even as if there is huge career progression, especially if you want to focus on teaching rather than riding (I doubt I would ever achieve my stage IV riding for example). I'm 27, I don't want to still be worrying about paying the rent and living like a student but if I went full time as a riding instrutor, I don't see an end to it.
Ugh, I am really miserable today, I actually came home from the yard and cried. It is so ridiculous - I loathe my other job and dread going in yet the job I love and am good at, I can't afford to do. Maybe I have got the wrong end of the stick with this career but I feel so helpless.
But.... if I went full time at my local riding school as an instructor I would have to survive on a salary of abou £6 per hour. Which I really don't think I can do. Consequently, I also have a part time job working for the Council. I hate this job, I suck at it, I am completely demotivated... yet they pay me about £19,500 per annum pro rata.
I just don't understand why it has to be this way. Being a riding instructor is a difficult job to do well, the qualifications required are not easy to achieve - the work is mental, pysical and emotional... so why is it so badly paid?
I look at some of the people around me who have full time office jobs. Yes, they work hard but they have flexi time, holidays and sick pay, sometimes spend time on the internet messing around or emailing mates, and they are paid good salaries with plenty of career progression. They have bought houses (or are saving), drive nice cars, they go out socialising, buy clothes etc have pleasant lives. Yet if I was to go full time doing a job to which I am 100% committed, working long fixed hours, with minimum holiday entitlement, no sick pay, no pension etc etc (all of which I would be prepared to do)... I would basically be trying to survive on minimum wage. I'm a single person, I have no support from my parents so I would not be able to save for a house or get a mortgage, I'd probably have to part with my horse or at least stop competing her. I certainly wouldn't be able to go out socialising with friends.
All the riding instructors I know are married with their other half being the primary bread winner. But in the 21st centuary you can't go into a career on the assumption that you're going to get married soon so money won't be an issue!
Why is that a perfectly respectable career, requiring commitment and qualifications, is out of the question for me finacially unless I want to live in poverty for the rest of my life? It is not even as if there is huge career progression, especially if you want to focus on teaching rather than riding (I doubt I would ever achieve my stage IV riding for example). I'm 27, I don't want to still be worrying about paying the rent and living like a student but if I went full time as a riding instrutor, I don't see an end to it.
Ugh, I am really miserable today, I actually came home from the yard and cried. It is so ridiculous - I loathe my other job and dread going in yet the job I love and am good at, I can't afford to do. Maybe I have got the wrong end of the stick with this career but I feel so helpless.