Ways You Are Teaching Your Kids to Be Entitled
5 Ways You Are
Teaching Your Kids to Be Entitled
How
does a parent raise an entitled child? Especially since no parent intends to?
Entitlement pervades nearly every aspect of today’s culture,
which means Christian families aren’t immune from its influence. In fact, if
you aren’t proactive, it’s almost a given you’ll raise an entitled child. It’s
a sobering thought.
Most parents know entitlement develops when a child is given too
much, too soon, but many parents don’t realize entitlement is also bred in more
subtle ways. More lethal ones.
Could you be accidentally raising an entitled child? Here are five common parenting mistakes that
can lead to entitlement:
1. Allowing Your Kids to
Interrupt
I
recently attended a meeting at the home of a family with three adorable kids.
Halfway through the presentation, one of the children ran into the living room
and stood next to the speaker. “Have you seen Frozen? I love it!”, she
declared, then launched into a litany of reasons she loved the movie—smack in
the middle of the speaker’s presentation.
Granted,
this was an informal meeting, but still, the parents said nothing. The
interrupted leader sat visibly uncomfortable, unsure of how to regain control.
This
innocent parental mistake holds consequences if not addressed. Kids who don’t
learn respect for other people’s time, conversations, or physical space are
essentially being taught “the world revolves around you.” When life becomes
child-centered, kids become me-centered. Kids who aren’t taught to wait for
their turn—whether on the playground, or in the living room—are on the path to
becoming entitled.
Is
it important to give our kids undivided attention? Of course! At appropriate times. We want to raise
engaging kids, not entitled kids.
Does
your child interrupt? Try this: First, explain the importance of waiting to
speak until others finish. Then develop a “secret signal” your child can use
when you’re in the middle of an adult conversation. My kids placed their hand
on my arm, then I place my hand on theirs, letting them know I would turn my
attention to them soon. It was a win-win solution.
2. Not Making Please and
Thank You a Big Deal
Even
entitled folks say “please” and “thank you” for the big things in life. But
grateful people remember to say these words for the small things, too.
When
our kids were young, my husband started a family ritual at dinnertime. At the
close of every meal he’d say, “Thanks, Mom, for this great dinner”—even if the meal
was take-out. It was a small habit that reaped big rewards. Our kids learned to
appreciate the daily things we do for one another. They became grateful people,
not entitled people.
Has
your family gotten out of the habit of saying please and thank you? Try this:
Lead by example. For the next seven days, thank your spouse and/or child for
something you might normally take for granted.
3. Breaking the Rules
This
one is perhaps the most common in today’s culture. Rules, many of us figure,
are more like guidelines. Sure, we want everyone else to follow them, but us?
Our kids? Well, we’ll be the judge. Today’s mantra seems to be “Don’t tell ME
what to do.”
Here’s
the problem: allowing kids to break rules, whether minor, like running at the
pool, or major, like breaking curfew, teaches disrespect for authority. It
leads to chaos in a home, in a school, in a society. The issue at stake is much
bigger than running at pools, or staying out after curfew, or whatever rule
happens to be at issue in the moment. The message we send when we allow our
kids to make their own rules is “the world revolves around you; it revolves
around us.” And that message leads to
entitlement.
Does
this mean we need to parent like tyrants?
Not at all. But we do need to lovingly and consistently teach our kids
to follow the rules.
Have
you allowed your kids to “bend” the rules? Try this: The next time you’re faced with any rule,
whether big or small, (think “keep off the grass,” “no dogs allowed,” etc.)
follow it. Use it as a teaching opportunity.
4. Being Too Quick to Step
In
We
all know that mom or dad—the one who pitches a fit if their child doesn’t make
first string, doesn’t get the A, or doesn’t get the recognition. Of course, we
want our children to succeed, but the goal is to help our children learn how to
succeed based upon their own merits. When children receive recognition based
upon parental intervention rather than their own initiative, entitlement
results.
Have
you been too quick to step in? Try this: Give your child the gift of working
hard to achieve a goal. Resist the temptation to intervene unless absolutely
essential. Be okay with a little failure along the way. Failure isn’t fatal if
it helps your child develop character. Allow your child to succeed in his or
her own time and own way and you’ll raise an empowered child, not an entitled
one.
5. Following the Crowd
These
days it’s not uncommon for middle school kids to reserve party limos or
preschool children to have birthday parties as elaborate as weddings.
Is
all this excess healthy? Who started this trend? And why did we as a society
follow it?
There’s
a fine line between making our kids feel special and making our kids feel
spoiled. If every event is special, soon no event is special. Special becomes
ordinary. Parents spend time, energy and money trying to top the last party,
the last gift, or the last event. It’s a crazy maker for parents and an
entitlement maker for kids.
Have
you blindly followed the crowd? Try this: Before mindlessly buying the latest
gadget or allowing your child to participate in some activity just because
everyone else is, stop. Look beyond the moment. Is the decision in your child’s
best interest in the long term? Resist the urge to give too much, too soon. instead,
give your child the opportunity to look forward to things as they mature; then
special things really will be special. Anticipation is an antidote for
entitlement.
Yes, we live in the age of entitlement. But our
families don’t have to be victims. We can chart a new course—a better one—for
our children. Entitlement isn’t merely a function of giving our kids too much
stuff; it’s also a function of failing to give our kids the stuff they really
need: parental guidance, wisdom, and direction. With a little know-how and
effort, we can turn the tide of entitlement.
Donna Jones Crosswalk.com Contributing Writer
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