From corporate bullies, gossips and lost souls in the workplace to tyrannical toddlers, nonsensical conversations and long days at home as you lose your mind; really, the workplace and home life have lots of similarities, I wanted to assure him.
Nevertheless, having children provides its own glass ceiling in the workplace, and it's a barrier that affects men and women. Women, being the ones more likely to take maternity leave and stay at home with kids, butt up against it more often. But men who don't want to be Skype-daddies to their brood are also vulnerable.
The Economist this week declares children to be the "biggest obstacle" to women not getting ahead in the "'anytime, anywhere' culture of big corporate jobs" - the long hours of travelling and schmoozing being simply incompatible with parenthood. Women are also held back by their propensity not to study maths, engineering, science or computing, plus a little bit of sexism, mixed with the fact that they don't like to ask for raises or promotions - but it's maternity leave that seems most likely to gazump them.
This seems unlikely to change unless companies adopt radical new ways of working. Some have. Global consumer giant Unilever allows employees to set their own hours (as long as the job gets done) and has also cut right back on non-essential travel.
It will always be hard for those with young children to carve out the time to fulfil jobs, and some women fool themselves that they can have it all when it comes to the very early days of child raising.
It doesn't help when women like Marissa Mayer, eight months pregnant and the new boss of Yahoo!, claims she will work through her two-week maternity leave and get back to it full-tilt straight afterwards (and anything else is for wimps). Spoken like a woman who has never had a newborn in her care.
Much has been said about the folly of mandating a certain number of women into management and board positions, and I tend to agree. Instead, taking a view that all employees should be able to maintain a life outside the firm, and not be discriminated against for doing so, may be a more useful place to start.
* Illustration by Anna Crichton: illustrator@annacrichton.com