SwingsitlikeHogan
Major Champion
Excuse my lengthy reply & please don't think I'm jumping on the band wagon here bashing you or your son. As i think the support you and Mrs SiLH are willing to give him is admirable, and I can understand to a degree what you feel. There is a big BUT though and that seems almost like your having an apologetic attitude to his plight with constant lack of work(income) & by keeping ploughing your hard earned life savings into his what seems a somewhat pipe dream career, you're merely adding to the thought of "oh well if it doesn't work mum & dad will bail me out as usual". It's not helping him take responsibility for his own life, finances or long term future.
We've often heard you blame the government for his financial plight, now we're hearing you believe the government need get their finger out and help retrain in an industry he has no experience and has no short term future let alone long term. His lack of income through his dream career choice has nothing to do with any government letting him down & keep blaming government for his potential future short term career is equally unhealthy, surely its time as a grown man in his mid 20s its time for him to accept its his own choices to continue working in an industry that offers no security and keeps him running back to you for financial support is actually a poor life choice, that he gave it a go but now its time to change whilst he's young enough to take advantage of a new opportunity. He could continue to do his dream as a side project so he wouldn't need to let that passion go.
My own daughter is 20 and at 18 won a dance scholarship to a very well known national academy which was her dream, but she made an incredibly grown up decision that as much as that's all she had wanted to do she understood that the risk of that career choice and future income was just to unstable. So she got herself a job in Wilkinsons, nothing great as jobs go but 2 years later she earns £11ph & has paid her own way through a 2 year college diploma that's due to finish this month and has a new career lined up that will be something she can achieve a lot of success in. I use her as an example as its a similar industry to your sons and is something she still does on the side now as a hobby and passion.
As I've said this isn't bashing your son or the support you as a parent give lovingly, but I'd suggest now is time to have a hard conversation, stop blaming or seeking answers from government and if you wish to help him financially, rather than pouring your money into another dream of music production with no guarantees, that money could still be given as support if you wish but instead to perhaps help him retrain in a career that helps him have stability and stand on his on 2 feet forever more.
Whatever choice is made I wish you and him well, I hope you all manage to resolve it and have future success and less troubles ??
Thanks @Wolf. My son is continuing seeing what he can do in his dream job line.
He is not looking for ANYTHING from the government. In fact it is only since he lost all of his income when venue and clubs closed that he started to claim benefits - benefits that he could have been claiming for YEARS but chose to not do so as he wanted to take responsibility for his own life. So please do not think for one second that he is sitting whinging about the government not doing anything for him. He is not. He is extremely grateful for the support he is getting through UC at the moment, but wants to get off it and back to work as soon as possible
So he - along with maybe 3,000,000 others will start looking for alternatives. But given that jobs are going and not being created, that 3,000,000 are going to find it tough getting a new job - especially when there will be many newly redundant with relevant experience chasing every job.
So what is the government going to do?
It might simply choose to do nothing and let market forces run their course. And if that is what it chooses to do then in the current environment I fear that that will mean a lot of people kicking their heels for a long time. But that is a choice that the government can make.
Alternatively the government might choose to look to see where it can create new roles required for managing the country through the crisis. And by such I mean such as 22,000 Contact Tracers. And so likewise if schools need additional temporary teaching support to reopen in September then the government could if it chooses provide schools with additional funding for the new positions; and schools could get on with recruiting that support; getting new recruits cleared for working with children; and trained in the basics of managing a group of students.; what they can do with students and what they can't.
There are things that the government can do under new job/role creation required and re-skilling training programmes in a time of Covid - they just need to work with those in every sector to identify what is required and get on with it.
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