eliza61
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jun 2, 2003
- Messages
- 21,014
Ok a mom notices her daughter 14 is spending 1100 bucks a month shopping and decides to send her to India to work with the poor because NOW she realized kid is spoiled.
and in 20 years people will wonder how this kid got feelings of entitlement.
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Parenting...-mumbai-slum-lesson-poverty/story?id=10284375
So can this kid be "budgetized"?
Fed up with her daughter's incessant, spoiled behavior, a New York screenwriter sent her teenager to the slums of India for a close-up lesson on how the poor lived.
Tracey Jackson took her shopaholic daughter to India to change her perspective.And she filmed it for the world to see.
Tracey Jacksonsaid her daughter's upbringing in Manhattan's wealthy Upper East Side neighborhood had left her without a sense of what it meant to need for life's basic necessities.
The catalyst for the trip was Jackson's finding more than $12,000 worth of clothing and other items thrown down carelessly on the floor of her daughter Taylor Templeton's room.
"One moment you wake up and you go, 'I can't take this anymore,'" Jackson told "Good Morning America" today. "When I started to make this, I decided the only way it was going to matter was if I show it the way it was."
Mom has a lot of issues too.
and in 20 years people will wonder how this kid got feelings of entitlement.http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Parenting...-mumbai-slum-lesson-poverty/story?id=10284375
So can this kid be "budgetized"?

Fed up with her daughter's incessant, spoiled behavior, a New York screenwriter sent her teenager to the slums of India for a close-up lesson on how the poor lived.
Tracey Jackson took her shopaholic daughter to India to change her perspective.And she filmed it for the world to see.
Tracey Jacksonsaid her daughter's upbringing in Manhattan's wealthy Upper East Side neighborhood had left her without a sense of what it meant to need for life's basic necessities.
The catalyst for the trip was Jackson's finding more than $12,000 worth of clothing and other items thrown down carelessly on the floor of her daughter Taylor Templeton's room.
"One moment you wake up and you go, 'I can't take this anymore,'" Jackson told "Good Morning America" today. "When I started to make this, I decided the only way it was going to matter was if I show it the way it was."
Mom has a lot of issues too.



