Spoiled Rotten?
Spoiling. Wow, what a hotbutton topic. Right now, as I type, I’m listening to the Brian Lehrer show, on my local NPR radio station (WNYC; I listen to it streaming live on WNYC.org). He’s talking to Rufus Griscom, the founder of the parenting website Babble.com. Babble has a column called “Bad Parent,” and he’s been on Lehrer’s show every Thursday this month, chatting about different so-called “taboos” of parenting.
Far as I’m concerned, some of these “taboos” are more or less the everyday here in Chez Mean Mom. I’ve enjoyed these segments because they show me that “bad” (a.k.a. mean) parenting is back! But I digress.
So. Spoiling. It’s yet another of those high-class parenting problems, right? Families struggling with the mortgage aren’t fretting whether or not another Wii game is in the cards for their brood, or how quickly you can replace the flat-screen TV, through which their 5-year-old threw the Wii remote when he got angry at a game (a real overheard conversation at the Y the other night). With every generation, the definition of “spoiling” changes, which is as it should be, I guess.
Lehrer referred to an essay once posted on Babble by a mom who was afraid she may be raising spoiled Mama’s boys when her little guys grumbled about their cold clothes on the one morning she neglected to run their pants through the drier to warm them up. Hilarious, isn’t it, imagining those boys, grown up and in adult relationships, sullenly expecting their wives to toast their khakis before work every morning, eh?
Doing every, little, itty bitty thing for our kids is, for sure, a form of spoiling. It’s literal spoiling: if they never learn to make a sandwich, they’re spoiled not just because they expect sandwich service from you (or some other sap down the line) for life, but because they are missing out on learning an important skill. That also goes for doing things around the house that kids could do, but in many cases don’t — like raking the autumn leaves, shoveling the winter snow, cleaning the pool. (Does it go without saying that I did all those things the minute I was old enough? I also, for the record, stacked firewood. My parents had a knack for deciding to move the woodpile every year or so, for reasons that escape me now. I’m wondering if it was merely a character-building exercise for me and my sister? Hmmm…)
Then there’s the other kind of spoiling, which to me is far, far more insidious. It’s the kind of spoiling that encompasses everything from the sense of entitlement that grows like a cancer in homes when kids get everything they want without a moment of having to wait, or save, or consider whether they need it; to the lack of respect that’s bred in families where kids are not required to speak kindly to each other or the adults around them, or where manners aren’t enforced; to homes in which there are no rules, no clear sense of who’s in control. That spoils kids because it slows their progress toward maturity.
This last bit really gets my goat, and I see it everywhere. I see it when parents labor under the very dangerous notion that giving kids choices and letting them make all the decisions (starting from toddlerhood!) is better than just saying “because I said so.” This irritates me (and I’m not alone) because those kids tend to be, putting it charitably, out of control little monsters. But it also saddens me, because these kids end up anxious, insecure, and immature later on. Why? Because they’re dying for someone to just tell them what to do. They may seem as though they want to choose when to go to bed or what to eat for dinner, but that’s not the case.
I indulge my boys far more than my parents did me, but I want to make a distinction between indulging and spoiling. Spoiling is tossing things at kids without giving them a sense of where they come from or what sacrifices are being made to give them those things. Indulging is giving them treats just because, letting them know that you’re doing things for them because they’re fabulous children who deserve good things in life.
Here’s an example. This August, I’m taking my children to Disney World. There are kids in Daniel’s class who go to Disney every year, and have since they were babies. There’s nothing wrong with that, and if those kids are spoiled (and from close observation, I can tell you some of them are!), it’s not because they go to Disney. It’s because they expect that a trip to Disney, or non-fake Ugg boots, or an Xbox 360 game system, is simply what they deserve. It’s a shrug of the shoulders, it’s the status quo.
I know my kids are only 5 and 7 and don’t have a mature grasp of money, but that doesn’t stop me from telling them, without drama and point blank, that for the last few years we have not had the money for expensive trips or really cool game systems. I think it’s working. They now understand that a trip to Disney is pricey, a sacrifice, a treat-to-beat-all-treats. They are over the moon. We’re staying in one of the property’s “value” level hotels, which are perfectly nice. I was showing the boys the Disney website, clicking on pictures of the rooms and the eating areas and the pools.
“Daniel, look,” I said. “Our hotel has two pools!”
His already saucer-like eyes got wider. “Can we go in both of them?” he asked.
Rufus Griscom, in the radio chat today (and I’ve been going on so much here that Brian Lehrer’s long moved on from that segment, but check it out if you can), mentioned the famous marshmallow experiment, about how kids who could successfully delay gratification ended up all-around better adults.
All-around better adults: that’s what I’m after, in raising these kids of mine.
Oh, and later? I’m going to be asking my husband if he thinks we should move the woodpile pretty soon.
The gold digger
January 28, 2010 @ 4:04 pm
I was struck by how many of the successful people I worked with were spoiling their own kids. These folks had worked for everything they had. They were raised by working class parents – were the first ones in their families to go to college, on scholarship. And they were handing their kids everything on a platter.
One guy had a teenage son, but paid a lawn service to cut the grass. I asked why the son didn’t cut it. “He doesn’t do it right.” When the son wrecked his car at college 300 miles away a week before Christmas, the guy complained that now he was going to have to buy a plane ticket. I bit my my lip while another friend snorted and asked what was wrong with Greyhound.
A VP who had a stay at home husband and two teenage daughters complained about spending the weekend cleaning the house. I asked what???? Oh, her cleaning lady had quit. I am thinking, But you have a stay at home husband! And two teenage daughters! I don’t say it out loud because she is my VP. She goes on to say that her daughters are princesses. I think, I hope they never come to work for me because you are not teaching them the right values.
Yvonne
February 13, 2010 @ 12:02 pm
I am living the end result of spoiling a child. My daughter is 19 years old now and has nothing to do with me. Here’s just one of my mistakes that had huge consequences:
– listening to the direction of a child. At the time, I thought that it was “good parenting” to listen to your children. Encourage them to give in-put and opinion. And do what they say, to show them that they are honored, considered, and respected. As an at home mom at the time, my daughter controlled the whole day (from birth). It was difficult to break away to do laundry, cook, toilet, because she’d melt down the entire time. My only break was when she napped. Now, I consider all of that pressure put on a child just to nap, as nearly an abuse. All of my emotions were wrapped up in the nap time, because I literally didn’t exsist as a person all of the rest of the time. I was her machine, her present help, her playmate, her toy… I didn’t learn lessons quickly, this behavior went on for a long time.
By school age, she chose her school – a private school; I paid for it. She chose her interests (soccer, roller skating lessons, flute lessons, voice lessons, acting lessons, etc.), I supported them all.
We bought our first house when she was around 9 years old. She hated it and called it the ghetto house from the start. It was a fixer up, but it was our first home that we owned and I personally was very proud of myself. She maintained her anger daily, that this house was not her choice and she hated it here.
We decided to have another child when she was 10. She said to me, “What the hell are you doing having another child, when you can’t even give me everything that I want!” She hated her brother when he was born, and was not kind or sympathetic at all about pregnancy, nursing, or my care for the baby. If she wanted to go to the mall and I had just laid baby down for a nap, she’d bang on his bedroom door and shout, “He’s awake now! So you can take me to the mall!” She wouldn’t ride the bus because only dirt bags ride busses. It was a horror to live with her.
That baby brother…. turns out he had cancer. She had to move in with Grandma and Grandpa (who are wealthy) while we moved to the children’s hospital for cancer treatments and surgeries. To this day, I regret not interrupting her life and just having her come to the hospital with us to experience the family trauma of cancer. But I didn’t make that decision.. She moved in with the rich people that she always wanted to be with anyways. $200.00 shopping sprees every Saturday and so on. Her life went on undisturbed.
Now, she’s still with them… they give her everything…. and she doesn’t need me for anything. I haven’t seen her for a year and a half. Our son is 6 now, and healthy…. Since there were so many years for me to reflect on, he is being raised with a very different attitude. His life is important and we have no time to waste on crying and fussing over non-important issues. He’s a happier kid for it. We also have added a baby sister. As time goes by they are growing older and more beautiful every day. My oldest chooses to just live her own life for herself. I have never been so disappointed.
Spoiling a kid, spoils every thing… and then you have to live with it.
Mrs Embers
March 11, 2010 @ 12:23 pm
We’re trying not to spoil the boys- sometimes we succeed, sometimes we don’t. I know they don’t do as much housework as they could; it’s not that I think they shouldn’t have to do it, but that it’s just easier for me to do it. I’m trying to get past that.
It’s great when it works, though. A few weeks ago, Simon (4), who loves the band KISS, wanted the Gene Simmons controller for Guitar Hero. Now, not only am I NOT going to spend $70 on that for him (we don’t even spend that on birthdays), we don’t even HAVE whatever you play those games on! We talked about money and saving and also alternatives: what else could he do or use to be happy without that toy? We (he and I) ended up constructing an Axe out of cardboard, duct tape and paint, and I’m quite proud of the results- I think he is, too!:
http://csectionlobotomy.wordpress.com/2010/03/06/genes-guitar/