August 2011

The August Smile:

Last weekend I hit two stores, picking up some back-to-school items for my grandkids.  I witnessed a flurry of activity as moms filled shopping carts with notebooks, lunchboxes and all sorts of school supplies.

“Wow,” I thought to myself.  ”This is almost as crazy as Christmas shopping.”  But no, something was different than the holiday rush.  And then I put my finger on it–these women were smiling!  Some even humming…. And a few were just plain jovial.  ”Hoorah for back to school!!!”

-–Lynn Johnson, Editor

Myrna Sheppard at Snowflake's July Pioneer Parade
Myrna Sheppard (2011 Arizona Mother of the year) and family members greet crowd at Snowflake’s July Pioneer Parade.

THE GREATEST THREAT TO OUR KIDS — ENTITLEMENT

Editor’s note: Parent polls from a number of sources indicate that the most worried-about parenting challenge of all is the entitlement attitudes of today’s kids.  

Richard and Linda are New York Times #1 bestselling authors who lecture throughout the world on family related topics. They also happen to be the parents of our Arizona Young Mother, Shawni Pothier!

The Eyres recently wrote a book on the subject of entitlement and in an article in Meridian Magazine, discussed this topic. With their permission, we are sharing this article with you. 

Entitlement” is the best name we know for the attitude of children who think they can have, should have, and deserve whatever they want, whatever their friends have—and that they should have it now, and not have to earn it or give anything for it. 

And it goes beyond having to behaving.  They think they should be able to do whatever they want, whatever their friends do, now, and without a price.    

A sense of entitlement contributes mightily to laziness, to low motivation, to boredom, to messiness, to bad choices, to instant gratification and constant demands for more, and to addictions (including the addiction to technology).

So where does this sense of entitlement come from?

A sense of entitlement (which is the polar opposite of a sense of responsibility) is endemic among children today.

It is fostered by our demanding, narcissistic society where wants are confused with needs and where everyone seems focused on the notion that he deserves what everyone else has.  Gone are the days when kids expected to have to work for something, even for acclaim.  Everyone gets a trophy now, everyone is recognized, and everyone is special.

Kids grow up in a reality-show world, thinking of themselves as the central character on the stage.  They have a facebook page, they are famous in their own minds, they are like rock stars, and to them there is no room (and no need) for true emotional empathy, or self examination, or personal responsibility.  Nor is there much incentive or motivation to learn to work.

And they think they are entitled not to have limits or boundaries or discipline.

And it is us parents, by not saying “no” and by giving them what they demand, that become the ultimate enablers.

In their book Living in the age of Entitlement, The Narcissism Epidemic, Jean M. Twenge and W. Keith Campbell explain it this way:

It is increasingly common to see parents relinquishing authority to young children, showering them with unearned praise, protecting them from their teachers’ criticisms, giving them expensive automobiles, and allowing them to have freedom but not the responsibility that goes with it.  Not that long ago, kids knew who the boss was—and it wasn’t them.  It was Mom and Dad.  And Mom and Dad weren’t your “friends.”  They were your parents.

Then Twenge and Campbell get at one of the true causes of entitlement:

The sea change in parenting is driven by the core cultural value of self admiration and positive feelings.  Parents want their kids’ approval, a reversal of the past ideal of children striving for their parents’ approval.

And as our lives get busier and busier, as both parents work, and as the disconnect grows greater between what we say our priorities are and where we actually spend our thought and energy, we parents give our kids things instead of time, spoiling them as we add fuel to the entitlement flame.

Dan Kindlon, in his book Too Much of a Good Thing puts it simply:

     We give our kids too much and demand too little of them.

Kindlon goes on to argue that when kids are overindulged, it leads to outcomes resembling the seven deadly sins:   pride, wrath, envy, sloth, gluttony, lust, and greed.

One day one of our sons, eight year old Jason, (name changed to protect the not-so-innocent) came home from school on an early spring day, and he was missing an article of clothing. You might guess it was his jacket, but in fact it was his shoe!  It was cold outside, and when he came in with just a sopping wet sock on one foot, I reacted in typical parental fashion.  “Where is the world is your shoe son?”

A friendly boy, he reacted conversationally, “Well Dad, the snow is melting and there was water going down the ditch, and Chad and I needed a boat.  The shoe worked great!”

“But son, where IS your shoe?”

“Well, you know where the water goes under the road….the shoe went in the tunnel, but it never came out the other side.”

“Jason! Do you know how much that shoe cost?”

“No”

I was there with my hands on my hips, glaring down at him and finally Jason got the message that I was upset, and his instinct was to fight back.  He put his hands on his hips and glared right back up at me.

“Well, it was YOUR shoe!”

“What do you mean it was my shoe?”

“Well, you bought it, and you’ll probably have to buy me another one now won’t you!?”

After I overcame a couple of impulses brought on by that last comment, I had an ah-ha moment—I realized something that would change my approach to parenting: Jason felt no sense of ownership for his shoe!  Why would he?  He didn’t buy it; he hadn’t given up anything for it.  He hadn’t even picked it out.  And without the perception of ownership, he couldn’t have felt a sense of responsibility.  What Jason felt instead was a sense of entitlement!  He was entitled to another shoe!

Since then, we have realized that the perception of ownership can not only keep shoes on kids’ feet, it has the potential to greatly simplify parenting and to literally rescue our kids from the entitlement trap.

If kids don’t choose and work and earn, they will not feel ownership, and if they don’t feel ownership, they will not value or maintain or feel responsibility.

The whole connecting concept can be diagramed:

All the lines of the triangle work in all directions.  Work creates ownership and ownership motivates work.  Ownership breeds responsibility and responsibility serves ownership.  Responsibility requires work, and work underscores responsibility.

But the place to start with kids is ownership.  Giving them the real (and early) opportunity to own things, from money to choices, is what starts the ball rolling and leads inevitably to work and responsibility.

Begin with the basic ownership of money and what money will buy.  Set up a “family economy” where kids have jobs in the household (taking care of common areas that everyone uses, doing dishes, etc.) and keep track of all that they do and get paid on Saturday rather than getting a something for nothing allowance.  What they get paid is exactly proportionate to how many of their jobs they get done.

The basic process of the idea is to take the money you are already spending on your kids and re-route it through their ownership and choices, and to make the whole thing part of a natural economy where parts of the money that comes into a household goes out to those who do parts of the common work around the home.

The basic premise of the idea is that it is better to have children learning the lessons of earning and spending and saving (and making mistakes in all three) while they are young and the stakes are small than when they are older and the stakes are large (and when banks start sending them pre-approved credit cards.)

The basic props of the idea are a family bank (a big wooden box, maybe painted silver or gold, with a big padlock on it and a slot in the top), a checkbook for each participating child (a real checkbook with the child’s name imprinted and with a check register—get them from a bank or a check printing company, or use some old checks of your own), and a basic peg board with four pegs for each child (the bigger the better, and the pegs had better be tied or chained to the board, or they are sure to be lost.) 

Work out the details of your family economy according to your own needs and feelings about what is important.  But make sure that the bottom line is that kids earn money, and thus feel ownership of it.  Make it possible for them to earn enough to buy the toys, gadgets and other things they want.

You will still want to have rules about what they can and can’t buy, but within these rules, let them buy what they want.  Let them make mistakes—spending too much on some things and having nothing left over for other things.  It’s better to learn from mistakes while they are young (start them on the economy when they turn eight) than when they are older and consequences are greater.

Once you get your family economy worked out and implemented, just sit back and let it work—observing what a difference a sense of real, owned ownership can make!

Source:  theeyres.com 

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