Money Integrity: Teach Your Children Well
© 2004-2005 Darlene Arechederra
'Live so that when your children think of fairness and
integrity, they think of you.'
-- H. Jackson Brown, Jr.--
We think of integrity as doing the right thing when no one is looking. Does
this hold true for money, too? Share with your children the money values you'd
like them to carry into adulthood. We have opportunities to teach our children,
even in unexpected ways!
Consider a few quick scenarios.
1. You find a $100 bill as you enter a local grocery store. Would you ask
Customer Service if anyone has reported losing any money recently, and what
amount it was?
2. You arrive home and discover a puppy sitting on your front doorstep. He has
no tags on him. You bring him in out of the cold and keep him for the night.
The next day, you discover his particular breed is worth $1800. Would you
attempt to locate his owners as you might if he were a mutt?
3. You place a health & beauty order through a coworker, and she mistakenly
thinks you've already paid her for it. Would you give her the money you owe
anyway, or would you keep quiet?
4. You and your family have just eaten a meal out. Due to several factors, it
was not as enjoyable as you had hoped. The bill arrives, and you notice some
items were left off the bill. Would you pay it without saying anything?
5. You're living a frugal lifestyle. You agree to join family members for a
meal out to celebrate mom's birthday. Do you order frugally, yet chip in a fair
share for mom's meal? Or do you skip contributing to mom's meal and have others
cover the entire portion?
6. Your last paycheck was $600 more than it should have been. While deciding
whether to notify Payroll at work, your spouse spends the entire $600. Do you
call Payroll anyway, knowing they'll probably deduct the money from each of
your next few paychecks? It will leave you no money for several weeks.
7. You're selling your old clunker. Do you disclose any problems you're having
with it? Does your answer remain the same regardless of whether your buyer is
male or female?
8. You discover that someone you dislike at work received a much bigger raise
than you. Do you share the amount of his/her raise with your friends and
family?
9. You purchase an ebook online -- it was exactly what you were looking for. A
week later, you're feeling a money pinch. Do you ask for your money back on the
ebook, even though it more than met your needs?
Children notice the decisions we make on a daily basis. Why not teach them how
to develop money integrity -- through your own interactions and decisions!
Do you have a scenario you'd like to share? Please email it to me. I'd love to
hear from you.
Author and ezine editor Darlene Arechederra inspires busy
women to put the fun back into saving their money. Her
complimentary newsletter serves up heaps of motivation with a
unique, down-home style of writing.
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