Hi anakha13,
I gave up teaching. I don't miss it one bit. Nope. Nada. Not one iota.
No more crap, stress, or aggravation. However, if you squint your eyes while looking at my forehead you will still faintly see the words "welcome". Yes, I was a welcome mat for many.
Not home, missed appointments, cancellations, reschedules, make-ups. I need this?
One parent was laughing how she completely forgot about the lesson for her son. I drove to their house for nothing and they thought this was somehow, someway funny.
Bad Checks. Non payment. Rudeness. Selfishness. Attack cats who sharpen their claws on your jacket. Dogs where the best case scenario is being licked to death but more frequently scare you to death. Yes, I've been bitten and had clothes muddied.
Pitbulls, snakes, ferrets and squawking birds. Mom making a racket in the kitchen. Remodeling, new window installions, lawnmowers, painting fumes. Teaching in peoples homes is no picnic.
Finding notes on the door when they should have called and saved me a trip.
Doorbells that don't work. No house numbers on their house. Crabby neighbors who complain about where your parked. I'm only in front of your house for an hour but of course they own the street right?
Fortunes lost on advertising and marketing not to mention time and effort wasted trying to drum up business.
One went to the movies. Why would they do this when they have an appointment with me?
Strangely the ones who come often and regularly pay you full price. No questions asked. The ones who want a break in the price turn out to be the flakes.
Some are just miserable people. It's not about me at all. Do technique and they complain about repertoire. Do repertoire and they complain about technique. Do both and they complain about why they are still on the same piece when obviously they haven't practiced.
The ratio of bad experiences to good is very high.
Every year I would have a day full of 10 lessons scheduled and not one was taught. I rationalized that "the big picture" was that at the end of the year I was making $50,000.00 +. So, I learned to accept this.
I can't drop everyone of my students that I'd like to, now can I? I have to make intelligent decisions based on each and every unique situation.
If the kid is a joy, a pleasure to teach and the mom or dad a nuisance then what do you do? Well, I take other things into consideration such as how far I have to travel and whether they fit conveniently into my schedule.
How long is my waiting list? Are they flexible with the time of their lesson. This can be very important when doing lessons in their home as I try to schedule lessons in the same geographical area, neighborhood or town back to back so I'm not driving all over creation in my car. This often requires changing someones time by an hour which many have a problem with.
I used to drive 35 minutes in my car to the same town on three different days of the week because they wouldn't let me book the appointments all on the same day. This can be very taxing as well as frustrating. I don't get paid for driving around in my car.
I will do the math for you. $60 for a one hour lesson. Okay, $20 of each lesson goes to so called "cost effective" advertising. Which means I net $40 per hour, right? Wrong! Not even close. A gallon of gas is $4 and then their is the wear and tear on my car. So $36 per hour, right? Well, your getting warmer.
If I travel 30 minutes to you and another 30 minutes back or to my next lesson then from the teacher's perspective, we have worked not one but two hours. So $36 divided by two is now $18 an hour.
Now with all the paperwork and phone calls which are time intensive and the people who refuse to pay for missed lessons which is lost time maybe I should divide $36 per hour by three and not two. What am I really making? I really, really don't want an answer to this question. It might be less than the legal minimum wage and violate all I kind of labor laws.
I don't like being on call 24/7 neither. They call 7 am. They call at midnight. I don't like working (notice I didn't say teaching) 7 days a week all hours of the day.
When are they available? Why after school of course or on weekends. Weekends were so busy I invented TGIM. Yes, Thank God It's Monday! After working mostly 1-11 weekdays (yes that's 10 hour days) I get to work 8-11 on weekends. No overtime of course. I actually only teach 6 students a day but it requires hours of 1-11 since I might drive an hour away to get to the first student. And more travel time from student to student. And then run back home for a lesson there and then back out in the car again.
I am getting ill just writing this out!
There are no benefits, overtime, holiday pay. Yeah right.
The worst is when you get sick. On the rare occasion when I have cancelled, parents have been very nasty like when my brother died. I had been crying all morning. I don't know how I remained professional enough to even phone them and let them know I wouldn't be coming rather than just not showing up. And if you go to their home with a cold, blowing your nose and coughing then they complain about that. If you don't do the lesson, then you don't get paid and since experience has taught me they may complain anyway I often go to the house sick, period. I bring cough drops and try not to talk too much on these days.
Parents drop their kid(s) off supposedly for piano lessons but in turns into babysitting when they don't comeback on time. This is still better than the overly involved, pain-in-the-ass, helicopter parents.
I have had students who cried when I praised them. I was surprised to find out how critical their parents were of their playing. I have to be a psychologist too, evidently.
I could go on and on and...
Thinking about giving up teaching? I'm not surpised.
I sincerely hope I have helped other teachers by sharing some of my experiences, Joe.
P.S. On bad days I have found it very useful to think to myself that the lessons are "FREE" and I am being paid mainly to put up with the insanity.