It is a gift to be a teenager, and I see a dad's job as lifeguard, not chaperone.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
My dad worked for child protection.
I can talk to my dad like he's my manager, and put 'Dad' on the back burner. We've been doing it since I was 13.
The modern rule is that every woman should be her own chaperone.
My father worked, and my mother played bridge. Every time I went out of the house, I was chauffeur-driven with my nanny next to me to stop me being kidnapped.
My dad's a worker, an electrician, a bog standard job. Nothing glamorous like a footballer, but yet he still provided me with what I needed.
If your lifeguard duties were as good as your singing, a lot of people would be drowning.
Dad often told me, 'My job is to help my boss do his job and make him look good.' That was my dad's objective. Everything about the way he conducted himself was to communicate support for his superiors and respect for his coworkers. The way he dressed was his starting point in that communication.
My father was a security guard. I was a security guard.
My dad takes care of me as a manager and as a dad. That's his job, you know, to take care of me. He has my best interests at heart.
My dad works in child protection and he's spent many, many years in that line of work.