Of course, your child has no money of his own; she can't take herself to the store or restaurant. No, these marketing geniuses realize that they must rely on our little ones to in turn "persuade" their parents. Children are no less marketing geniuses, tending to eschew high tech methods, however, in favor of the old school techniques of persistent pleading, sulking, and tantrums. Even if we parents manage to resist their rhetorical efforts, it generally winds up with children feeling denied, and parents feeling -- at least a little -- like mean-spirited ogres.
3 comments:
First time parent here- I love your blog!
Just wanted to say that you do an amazing job and keep up the good work.
What's scary to me is that most adults have already been desensitized to our over commercialized way of life, so parents that are trying to do the right thing often feel a sense of 'am I the crazy?'.
Motherhood, childhood, family life...it's all commercialized and we want to emulate that shiny picture in a magazine, or on TV.
When I was getting my nursery ready, and came to the realization that I didn't need 4/5ths of the things that are in baby magazines, or in Babies R Us, my girl friends recoiled in horror. 'But it's your first baby! You have to do it right!' (Hmm says something about me with the friends I have haha!)
But what happened to us as a society that 'doing it right' meant getting STUFF?
Anyways, sorry for the mini rant :)
Have an awesome day!
An inconvenient truth that, if not faced, can slowly but surely steal creativity and imagination from our children.
Say no to raising robot children...
model and embrace originality!
:)
You had me at "crap" and you nailed it. So now what do we do? I think we should keep posting about these preditors. Malika
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