Keywords
Search:

Do you buy too many things for the kids?

By Michael Ungar

Learn how to give them everything they need without spoiling them, and learn better communication skills, too.
How to give without spoiling your child

We need to provide our children (rich or poor) with opportunities to grow through exposure to manageable amounts of risk and responsibility. For example, offering to pay a child's way to work at a summer camp for children with disabilities in the French Alps would be a far more generous offer by a parent than the week-long funfest most are willing to finance. Insisting a child use his or her car to deliver pizza or newspapers in order to pay their own insurance is one way to teach responsibility and to make a child value what he or she owns.

For parents who have the resources to provide for their children, it is important that they provide wisely. Here are a few suggestions based on my own work with families who have had to teach their children how to be their best selves in spite of their wealth and privilege:

1. Don't buy it unless they need it. Let children buy what they need themselves by providing them with an allowance or, when older, helping them find work.

2. Buy what they don't need (like a special designer piece of clothing, an expensive piece of sports equipment, or electronics item) only when you are confident that the child isn't using the purchase to say something about herself. Remember, when our possessions become crutches for self-definition, we quickly find ourselves forgetting who we really are.

3. Provide children opportunities to make a contribution. Communities have lots of space for young people who want to give something of themselves to others.

4. Provide opportunities for children to experience lots of different types of people. Remember, they need practise fitting in if they are going to acquire the skills they need to convince others they are worth knowing on their own terms.

5. Give of your time more than your pocketbook. When love is in short supply, children will always choose a parent's attention over something bought at the store.

It all comes back to finding something powerful to say about ourselves. The things we own will come and go, but the feeling of accomplishment that comes with earning something endures. Earning something means assuming responsibility. And it is only through experiences of risk and responsibility that children find ways to hear that they belong, are trustworthy, respected, and competent. Ironically, we need to reinvent risk in the lives of our most privileged children in order to provide them with the building blocks for success.

Page 1 of 3 -- Learn how to better understand your children on page 2

  • Keywords : parenting , Family Life

Related content

Contests

All contests



Most popular videos

  • Slow Cooker Butter Chicken

    We've married our sumptuous butter chicken recipe with the ease of the slow cooker to create the ultimate Slow Cooker Butter Chicken. Food director Annabelle Waugh walks you through the steps in this video for a restaurant-worthy dinner every time.

  • Slow cooker pulled pork

    Watch how to create this tender, succulent pulled pork recipe with minimal effort and positive results every time.

  • 5 effective ab exercises

    Canadian Living fitness expert Pamela Mazzuca Prebeg shows you how to tone your abs with five exercises you can do at home.