Will Your Child be Rich or Poor? 15 Poverty Habits Parents
Teach Their Children
when I travel the country speaking to high school and
college students about exactly what they need to do to become financially
successful in life I always begin my presentation by asking three questions:
“How many want to be financially successful in life?”
“How many think they will be financially successful in
life?”
Almost every time I ask the first two questions every hand
rises in the air. Then I ask the magic third question:
“How many have taken a course in school on how to be
financially successful in life?”
Not one hand rises in the air, ever. Clearly every student
wants to be successful and thinks they will be successful but none have been
taught by their parents or their school system how to be financially successful
in life. Not only are there no courses on basic financial success principles
but there are no structured courses teaching basic financial literacy. We are
raising our children to be financially illiterate and to fail in life. Is it
any wonder that most Americans live paycheck to paycheck? That most Americans
accumulate more debt than assets? That
many Americans lose their homes when they lose their job? Is it any wonder that
most Americans cannot afford college for their children and that student loan
debt is now the largest type of consumer debt?
What’s worse is what our children are being taught by their
parents, the school system, politicians and the media. They are teaching our
children that the wealthy are corrupt, greedy, have too much wealth and that
this wealth needs to be redistributed. What kind of a message do you think that
sends to America’s future generation? It is teaching them that seeking
financial success by pursuing the American Dreams is a bad thing. The Occupy
Wall Street movement was a manifestation of this “wealth is bad and needs to be
redistributed “mindset. .
Here are some statistics from my five-year study on the
daily habits that separate the wealthy from the poor?
72% of the wealthy
know their credit score vs. 5% of the poor
6% of the wealthy
play the lottery vs. 77% of the poor
80% of the wealthy
are focused on at least one goal vs. 12% of the poor
62% of the wealthy
floss their teeth every day vs. 16% of the poor
21% of the wealthy
are overweight by 30 pounds or more vs. 66% of the poor
63% of the wealthy
spend less than 1 hour per day on recreational Internet use vs. 26% of the poor
83% of the wealthy
attend/attended back to school night for their kids vs. 13% of the poor
29% of the wealthy
had one or more children who made the honor roll vs. 4% of the poor
63% of wealthy
listen to audio books during their commute vs. 5% of the poor
67% of the wealthy
watch 1 hour or less of T.V. per day vs 23% of the poor
9% of the wealthy
watch reality T.V. shows vs. 78% of the poor
73% of the wealthy
were taught the 80/20 rule vs. 5% of the poor (live off 80% save 20%)
79% of the wealthy
network 5 hours or more per month vs. 16% of the poor
8% of the wealthy
believe wealth comes from random good luck vs. 79% of the poor
79% of the wealthy
believe they are responsible for their financial condition vs. 18% of the poor
The fact is the poor are poor because they have too many
Poverty Habits and too few Rich Habits. Poor parents teach their children the
Poverty Habits and wealthy parents teach their children the Rich Habits. We
don’t have a wealth gap in this country we have a parent gap. We don’t have
income inequality, we have parent inequality.
Parents and our schools need to work together to instill
good daily success habits as follows:
Limit T.V., social
media and cell phone use to no more than one hour a day.
Require that
children to read one to two educational books a month.
Require children
to aerobically exercise 20 – 30 minutes a day.
Limit junk food to
no more than 300 calories a day.
Require that
children set monthly, annual and 5-year goals.
Require working
age children to work or volunteer at least ten hours a week.
Require that
children save at least 25% of their earnings or gifts they receive.
Teach children the
importance of relationship building by requiring them to call friends, family,
teachers, coaches etc. on their birthdays and to send thank you cards for gifts
or help they received from anyone.
Reassure children
that mistakes are good not bad. Children need to understand that the very
foundation of success in life is built on learning from our mistakes.
Punish children when
they lose their tempers so they understand the importance of controlling this
very costly emotion.
Teach children
that seeking financial success in life is good and is a worthwhile goal.
Children need to learn what the American Dream is and that it is something to
be pursued in life.
Children need to
learn how to manage money. Open up a checking account or savings account for
children and force them to use their savings to buy the things they want. They
need to learn that they are not entitled to things like cell phones, computers,
fashionable clothes, flat screen T.V.s etc.
Require children
to participate in at least two non-sports-related extracurricular activities at
school or outside of school.
Parents and
children need to set aside at least an hour a day to talk to one another. Not
on Facebook, or on the cell phone, but face to face. The only quality time is
quantity time
Teach children how
to manage their time. They should be required to create daily “to do” lists and
these lists need to be monitored by parents. The goal should be to accomplish
at least 70% of their tasks on their daily “to do” list.
Wealthy people do certain things every single day that sets
them apart from everyone else in life. Wealthy people have good daily success
habits that they learned from their parents. These daily habits are the real
reason for the wealth gap in our country and the real reason why the rich get
richer. Unless we teach our children good daily success habits, and level the
playing field, the rich will continue to get richer and the poor will continue
to get poorer.
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