Parents are moved by instinct to love, nurture, and provide for their
offspring. Because our children are so much a part of us, we want to see them
blissfully happy. Also, our own desire to be liked, materialist pressures,
and a fervent wish that our children have everything we lacked as youngsters
can prompt us to spoil them. However, while it might seem that buying your
child expensive gifts will give them fond memories of childhood or that you
can heal your emotional wounds by doting on your sons and daughters, you may
be unconsciously interfering with your children’s evolutional development.
One of the most precious gifts you can grant your children is the true
independence they gain when they learn to earn what they covet and become
stewards of their own happiness. Try allowing your children to experience
life to the fullest. Let them work and earn what they want. When the time
comes for them to go to college and enter the workforce, you will have the
confidence that you have raised a child that can both enter and contribute to
society confidently.
When children are not afforded the opportunity to explore self-reliance, to
understand that with possession comes price, and to fulfill their own needs,
they develop a sense of entitlement that blinds them to the necessity of hard
work and the needs of others. We may spoil children because giving them gifts
is pleasurable. Or we may want to avoid conflict out of fear that our
children won’t love us. Yet children who are given acceptance, love, and
affection in abundance are often kinder, more charitable, and more
responsible than those whose parents accede to their every material demand.
They develop a strong sense of self that stretches beyond possessions and the
approval of their peers, and as adults they understand that each individual
is responsible for building the life they desire. If you find yourself giving
in to your child’s every whim, ask yourself why. You may discover that you
are trying to answer for what you feel is lacking in your own life.
Rearing your children to respect the value of money and self-sufficiency as
they grow from infants to young adults is a challenging but rewarding process.
It can be difficult to watch a child struggle to meet a personal goal yet
wonderful to be by their side as they achieve it. Your choice not to spoil
your children will bless you with more opportunities to show them
understanding and compassion and to be fully present with them as they
journey toward adulthood.
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