I am a woman and I have experience in taking care of babies as well since I’m a mother. And once once I hold a bachelor degree in nursing I can take care of the sick as well
I can Organize creative activities and educational games (e.g. drawing, crafting and puppet games)
Prepare children's meals and feed them (including bottle-feeding for babies)
Change diapers and bathe infants.
Help older children wash up and take baths.
Schedule nap times.
I'm the eldest of five children, so I naturally took on the role of teacher and mentor, even before I entered the child care sector five years ago. I'm a pentecostal. I do not smoke nor take alcohol.
I hold a bachelor of science in Nursing and a bachelor of Arts in Childhood Education.
Being a caregiver was the most rewarding part of my life. It was 2014 and I was just about to graduate high school in my small suburban town of about 5000 people. I knew almost everyone who lived there, albeit not by their first name but definitely by face. Everyone was friendly and got along with each other. The local economy consisted of many stores and service oriented businesses. Like any other regular town we had a few cleaners, pizza shops, mechanics and hardware stores. We even had a big manufacturing plant which hired about a third of the locals. However, in my senior year in high school, none of that really interested me. I didn’t necessarily want to become a lawyer or a doctor, but I knew I wanted to do something to make a difference. I wanted to do something that while making a living, I would also be accomplishing. That is when I thought of becoming a caregiver. While the idea wasn’t something entirely new to me, what I was about to get myself into was totally uncharted territory