In an effort to teach my kids in a hands-on way about money management, we started them with a small weekly allowance. They received their age in dollars each week with one dollar going to saving and one to charity. That left their age – $2 each week for wild spending sprees.
I really tried to let them decide how to spend THEIR money. It was hard sometimes to see them spend it on ridiculous stuff, but I figured it was better for them to learn that lesson over a few dollars than later in life when the stakes are higher.
It was all going fine until…well, let me tell you the story.
Teaching kids about money has been a challenge in these modern times. Kids don’t see mom and dad pull out cash for things other than vending machines. It is almost like money is no longer tangible.
In an effort to teach my kids in a hands-on way about money management, we started them with a small weekly allowance. They received their age in dollars each week with one dollar going to saving and one to charity. That left their age – $2 each week for wild spending sprees.
I really tried to let them decide how to spend THEIR money. It was hard sometimes to see them spend it on ridiculous stuff, but I figured it was better for them to learn that lesson over a few dollars than later in life when the stakes are higher.
It was all going fine until…well, let me tell you the story.
In an effort to teach my kids in a hands-on way about money management, we started them with a small weekly allowance. They received their age in dollars each week with one dollar going to saving and one to charity. That left their age – $2 each week for wild spending sprees.
I really tried to let them decide how to spend THEIR money. It was hard sometimes to see them spend it on ridiculous stuff, but I figured it was better for them to learn that lesson over a few dollars than later in life when the stakes are higher.
It was all going fine until…well, let me tell you the story.





















While I am not condoning The Bank’s practices, I have to admit I am impressed as his seemingly instinctual tactics to ensure survival of the fittest.
There is no way Wilbur or Peep attributed to that. Maybe it’s coming from another source?
Quite the little entrepreneur you have there!
That is some great use of bears and bulls. He’s got miserly written all over.
Oh that is hilarious! That kid is going to go far in life…
Reid sounds like he inherited his guarantor’s Target spending habits.
KEEP BELIEVING
Ryan sounds like Benjy, who went to Target and bought himself a refrigerator and filled it with yummy sodas of a many wide variety … then he charged his siblings (and parents) $.50 for the priviledge of drinking one of drinks.
At least he never asks us to borrow any money. 🙂 Unlike his older brother, who actuall has a job!
Clever! I’m sure Reid will think of something he can charge $5.50 for.
So, did Ryan get to keep the money? And was there a spider in there?
The suspense may kill me. (You think I’m kidding, don’t you?)
This totally sounds like something that my daughter would pull. She was selling junk from her room to her brother about a month ago. One tiny thing for, like, 5 bucks.
I was torn between “Atta girl!” and sympathy for my poor (literally) boy.
That’s hilarious! $5.50!
It must be a birth order thing. It’s the same way in our house. A1 won’t spend a cent. A2 spends every nickel on crap in the $1 bins at Target.
Oh, that is too funny! And you are a very generous mommy. My kids get $1 per year of age PER MONTH. Yes it has cut down on them asking for junk. I could write a whole post on the results since I’ve instituted allowance. SE hoards her money like a starving person hoards food, RS spends his money like it’s burning a hole in his pocket, and JL swiftly loses his. Funny how I predicted exactly that.But I loved your story about your little entrepreneur. Bill Gates watch out.