Cool-Beans said:
If you are all that worked up about that $125 that wasn't donated to charity, I would suggest that you give up your internet access and donate YOUR money. In your own words, "think of where that money could be better used."
I was raised to judge people based on the content of their character...not which kind of purse they carry. And I have raised my children to do the same. But thanks for telling me what the "real lessons" I should be teaching them are.
I really LOVED Enchanted Tiki's post

, but to Cool-Beans, I also have to say Bingo!!! I agree that we are raising a generation of spoiled, self-centered young people, but NOT because we give them a $175 purse. If any of you want to learn some really interesting facts about the way our society really works....I suggest you read Freakenomics. Example: The best way to teach your children to be lifelong readers is NOT to read to them, to make them read for a minimum of 30 min. per day, and it is not to have many books in your house. The best way to raise lifelong readers is to allow your children to see YOU reading!!! That fact is interesting in a whole lot of ways. Using that logic, the way to teach your children to "value" money (a totally weird concept to me anyway), is for you to not buy YOURSELF that $175 purse. What we do makes a much stronger statement than what we say. I totally believe that, if Mom has a Coach, and tells her daughter that she is not old enough to have one, she is dangling the proverbial "forbidden fruit" above the child's head, and thereby actually INCREASING the desire for materialism.
I was raised in a below poverty household. I began working year-round when I was 13...I lied and forged documents to work. I think being so poor made me MORE materialistic. I always felt everyone was "better" than me, and felt like I needed to "prove" my worth. Well, by all standards...I was successful. I have a graduate degree, and my dh makes more money in one year, than my mom made in 15 years. We are wealthy...even by American standards. My lesson learned...I am not any "better" now than I was when I was poor. And, I do not WANT my dd to feel like she is not as good as someone because she doesn't have what some other kids do, and I don't want her to feel better than other kids because she has more. My dd is 4, and by global standards....INCREDIBLY spoiled (but, by global standards ALL American kids are incredibly spoiled). However, she is already learning that stuff is just "stuff"....something no one ever could've convinced me of, because I never had the "stuff".
Now, dh and I do most, if not all of our clothes shopping at
Walmart (only his casual clothes...dress clothes come from $$$ places). Why? They're just clothes...I don't care!! However, it has taken me MANY years to get that way. I do have a thing for Brighton, so my purses, sunglasses, and watches are all Brighton. My wedding ring is...well, it just is. Why, because I LOVE diamonds!!! However, my car has 110,000 miles on it and I hope to put 60,000 more on it before we sell it. Why? It doesn't matter to me....i.e., it brings me no joy to have a new car rather than my old one...I really like my old one!!!
My point is this...EVERY choice I/we make is teaching my dd about values. Sure, I buy her a lot of stuff, but more importantly, we make time as a family to watch and/or participate in her activities. She likes gymnastics...so, we do group and private lessons. She likes ice skating, so we take time out to go EVERY weekend as a family, in addition to her lessons. We also listen to her and enroll her in other activities that she feels passionately about. And, whenever possible, we BOTH try to attend her activities. Why? Because what she achieves is more important than anything we could buy....and, I wouldn't risk missing out on seeing her do something for the first time for anything in the world!
Also, as a family, we decide what charities, community service groups we will support with our time and money. This is a big part of "keeping her in check". I feel that it is not what you give your kids that spoils them, but rather what your family's values are. If you are a "keeping up with the Jones' type of family, you're probably going to be in some trouble, but if you are a family that makes choices based on your TRUE interests...I don't see a problem. Helping your child find ways to give to others, and achieve things they never thought they could will help them feel so much better about themselves, and then whether or not they have a designer purse becomes a much smaller issue...it's just a purse!!! And frankly, I'd rather my dd get her purse, and go to a physical activity, than give her a video game so her butt stays glued in a chair all day...but, that is just me!!!
But, in an attempt bring some sanity back into this thread....any American who calls another American "materialistic" needs a SERIOUS reality check!!! We Americans are 8% of the world's population, and consume 25% of the world's resources. Such a statement would be so hypocritical that "Pot, your kettle is calling" cannot even begin to describe it!!
Sometimes, I think if we all decided to a better job raising our own kids, instead of complaining about how others raise their kids...we'd be a LOT better off!!
One of my favorites:
'If you have food in the refrigerator, clothes on your back, a roof overhead and a place to sleep ... you are richer than 75% of this world.
'If you have money in the bank, in your wallet, and spare change in a dish ... you are among the top 8% of the world's wealthy.
'And if you get this on your own computer, you are part of the 1% in the world who has that opportunity.'
'Also ... If you woke up this morning with more health than illness ... you are more blessed than the millions who will not even survive this week because of their afflictions.
If you have never experienced the fear in battle, the loneliness of imprisonment, the agony of, or the pangs of hunger and starvation ... you are spared of the agony of 700 million people in the world who are less fortunate.'
'If you can attend a church meeting without fear of harassment, arrest, or death... you are envied by, and more blessed than, three billion people in the world.'
'If your parents are still alive and still happily married ... you are very rare and very fortunate.'
'If you can hold your head up and smile, you are not the norm, you are unique to the millions who are in doubt and who live in despair.'
Seriously...it's not about a purse...