We all work too much. I work far too much, I know that. Just ask my four-year-old daughter, Mia, and she will tell you I do too. Though if she had her way I would stay at home playing with her in the backyard, dropping her off and picking her up from kindy, and generally be glued to her side.
Oh wouldn't it be lovely to be around to do all that instead of going to work, sitting at your desk, and pushing the old grey matter to extremes?
Of course, Mia still doesn't have a proper grasp on where the money to buy her shoes, winter jacket, and new toys comes from. And nor should she. We tell her about saving her money, and that we can't afford certain things, but if she wants to believe that money magically appears in my wallet then that's fine - for now, at least.
However, back to working too hard, because there's a new study out that has found kids reckon parents do just that.
Hey, it's an Australian study but since we're all moving over there in droves then it can surely be applied to New Zealand's family unit too. And besides, though we may not get paid as much as the Aussies we sure do work just as hard - if not harder - than they do.