Hello fellow istoryans. I need your two cents or opinion over this question I have been asked now more than twice while looking for a job.
The scenario is this. I left my previous job to care for my sick mother (I am an only child and I am raised by a single mom). We could not afford to hire someone to watch her since her medications and procedure were quite costly (we had to sell some property just to get by). Now that she's better, I am back on the market again, looking for a job.
Several companies that I applied for did not bother to ask this question, but some did. It is customary for them to ask why you left your previous job, and of course I told them the whole truth.
But I was asked, 'Suppose your mother gets sick again, will you leave your job once more to care for her?'. I was stunned when I first heard this question being asked. Now that I have been asked it again while being interviewed, I'd like to see what others opinion about it is.
As a hiring manager, you have to ensure that the person you are hiring will be loyal to the company. Therefore, you must probe further in to judge their loyalty.
But then, do they really need ask that question, when in fact you already know what the answer is? Saying 'no' is clearly a lie; and for I am certain that anyone would choose family over their jobs in such circumstances. This is not America.
Is it also right and fair to judge the applicant, whether to hire him or not, over this question? Neither you nor I can predict the future, and even so, going back to my previous argument, no person will ever choose their job over their family.
My usual answer to this unusual question is, 'There are lots of other companies out there who are in need of my talents. But I have only one mother'.
What is your say over this matter?