• Question: How hard is your line of work?

    Asked by ekul01 to Alex, Chris, Harriet, Jed, Ken on 13 Mar 2012. This question was also asked by fedge, meg001, kayleighstyles.
    • Photo: Ken Gibbs

      Ken Gibbs answered on 11 Mar 2012:


      Good question, but with no easy answer.

      If you mean hard in terms of technical difficulty (like the maths, physics and chemistry), then my work has been a doddle. This doesn’t mean that I am clever – because I am not – but I have been asked to solve some problems the answers to which only required quite simple thinking, but perhaps put together in a new way that others may not have thought about. It’s been a challenge, and fun.

      Now, you might rather have been asking whether the work I have done has required hard physical work ? The answer is definitely yes ! I think about having to walk to a school in Bhutan two years ago, which was only two miles away (as the crow flies) but which totally exhausted me. My guide just conveniently forgot to mention the bits in between which were very deep and craggy valleys and very steep and slippery hills. The walk there took 2 hours; the return took 3 hours. Never again !

      When working for small and sometimes remote communities, it is important to establish trust and I have found that often, working alongside the community has helped. True, you get terrible blisters and aching muscles – all signs of having done some hard work, but a necessary part of the process.

      So, my work has been both hard and fun in parts; and relatively easy and even more fun as well. You should consider trying it !

    • Photo: Jed Ramsay

      Jed Ramsay answered on 12 Mar 2012:


      I’m not sure that my work is hard… I used to work as a motorcycle courier in London and got knocked off my bike on more than one occasion and a long day riding around in the rain all day seemed hard! But today my job is not hard in that sense – it can be hard trying to juggle lots of projects at the same time – but I kind of enjoy that side of things.

      Perhaps one of the hardest things is when I have to meet the public and try and explain my work to them. When there’s a big flood I will usually be the person who goes to a meeting in a town and explains to everyone why they got flooded and what I could (or couldn’t!) do to try and make things better. That can be pretty hard as people can be very angry after they’ve been flooded.

    • Photo: Alexander Zacheshigriva

      Alexander Zacheshigriva answered on 13 Mar 2012:


      I manage.
      I can not call my work hard, because physically it is not very demanding, I get to spend a lot of time out in the elements sometimes, but personally I find that easier than a whole day in the office. And in terms of difficulty of the tasks I think it is challenging enough to keep me interested but I don’t feel like I am loosing the plot.
      Probably the hardest part of my work is waking up at 6am to go to work.

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