Prosperity Parenting

How parents sabotage their kids’ success
and and how they can ‘change the story’

Every parent wants the best for their kids. Yet millions of adults unknowingly sabotage their children’s chances for success.

I grew up poor. I was jealous of rich people and didn’t like them. So over the years I kept trying to get rich, not realizing that my subconscious mind was telling me, “Better stop doing that, or you’ll become one of the evil, mean, nasty rich people!”

The messages against wealth and prosperity are all around us, in our culture, media, and religions. But how many parents stop to think about how their own views on getting ahead influence their children’s ability to succeed?

Your core beliefs about everything related to prosperity – money, relationships, health, and spirituality – are set by the time you’re 10 years old. And no one influences those beliefs more than parents.

Millions of parents do this by conveying a negative vision of prosperity and success. If you tell yourself things like “If it wasn’t for bad luck, I’d have no luck at all,” and “I’m always a day late and a dollar short,” you will, consciously or subconsciously, convey these messages to your kids.

The truth is it’s really not that hard to change your beliefs – If you are aware of them and make that choice. Here are some tips:

Identify negative beliefs you may be creating in your children

Do some critical thinking about what kind of beliefs you developed in childhood about money, rich people and wealth. Honestly ask yourself, are you programming your children with thoughts such as money is bad, rich people are evil, or it’s spiritual to be poor? I call these “mind viruses.” Defeating them starts with acknowledging you have them.

Help kids identify anti-prosperity media messages

Did you ever stop to think about how blockbusters like Titanic and Avatar portray wealth, and how those stories can set kids up with attitudes that sabotage their future success? Talk to your kids about the subliminal messages they receive on TV, in movies and other media. Help them to become self-motivated critical thinkers.

Create a positive vision of prosperity

Examine how you react to families with more wealth than yours when speaking to your kids. Do you discuss them with envy or jealousy, or admiration and respect? Talk to your kids about how their thoughts about wealth can shape their future.

People have a hard time believing they are sabotaging their prosperity at age 30, 40, or 50 because of a belief that was formed when they were six, but I see it all the time. And that’s the book that gets written, unless you become aware of the plotline and decide to change the story.

Whether you and your children are on the path to poverty or prosperity is determined by the thoughts you give precedence to. Your thoughts come from the type of vision you have.

Everyone has a vision. Millions have a negative one; many more have a neutral one. It’s vital to help your children develop a positive one.

  • http://www.TapIntoYourLife.com Susan Somerset Webb

    This quote is from my book, TAP IT! The EFT Playbook, the chapter on Abundance. I love that he highlights how our beliefs affect our children. “This is the longest relationship you’ll have in your life.  Your parents talked about it before you arrived.  People will talk about it after you’re gone.  You may get ten years out of a car, perhaps 50 with a spouse. This relationship you can’t break up with, you can’t run away from, you can’t coax it into loving you more. The genre of this story can be fiction or non-fiction, tragedy or triumph.  This story ghost writes everything you do from what you eat and drink to what you plan and play. You may use it to regulate your mood, adjust your self esteem or influence others.  And…most importantly, the way you live this story will be what you teach your children.  It will be the model they will take in and see.  The villain, or hero, of this story is the most popular legal substance in the world.  You speak with it, it speaks to you.  What is it? Money.“  Dr. David Krueger

  • http://www.chrisjcrosby.com/ Chris Crosby

    This is one of my favorite parenting posts.