Let your daughter know she has a choice in life: To live with what she has, or to be forever wishing that she were someone else
This is a very sensitive question. Our children are growing up in an age of plenty that I think is unparalleled in our history. At the same time, the distribution of that wealth is creating two strata within our society. I am observing, not judging, when I say that the “haves” are spending money so far beyond the means of “don’t-haves” that it clearly exerts pressure on those who have “more but not enough,” and elicits envy in those who do not have at all. Even though the “don’t-haves” of our day have more than most of their great-grandfathers and great-grandmothers could have dreamed of.
Raising happy children means raising children in a happy home. When we are truly okay with what we have, we have a better chance of showing our children that happiness does not come from having more but from being more. How do we speak about wealth? How do we exclaim “Wow!” when we hear or see the extravagance of those who can afford it?
I will dare to say that I have seen young men and women who cause their parents big financial stress by demanding what “everyone” has. However, I will also dare to say that parents, when giving in to those demands, are ultimately responsible for their children’s inability to live within their means.
I am not judging you, and I am not trying to give mussar. Each of us has the responsibility to figure out what we have and how we should spend it. We are prohibited from wasting money that was given to us, and we are forbidden to spend money we do not have.
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