From Deseret News archives:

Trip to Africa is life-changing

Published: Monday, Dec. 19, 2005 12:36 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
VISTA, Calif. — When my 17-year-old daughter, Cassandra, got her driver's license a year ago, she wanted to know when she was "going to get my own car?" I was surprised and demanded to know where it was written that "you get a car when you get a driver's license."

She was genuinely disappointed. After all, the senior parking lot at our suburban San Diego high school brims with luxury cars — belonging to the students.

When my American husband left us, my father sold a piece of land back in our Nigerian village, and sent me a check with this note: "Single parent or not, if you bungle raising those children, nothing else you do will have mattered. ..."

I took those words advisedly and determined to raise courteous, confident, and contented kids, just as I had been raised in Africa. Not self-indulgent, self-absorbed young adults like those you see on TV or the ones hanging out in malls across America.

Although I shopped at thrift stores when my kids were little, I made sure they had everything they needed and sometimes more. I kept the family finances private, except to let them know we were struggling just like the next family. And in order to ensure that my kids appreciate what we have, I occasionally took them to volunteer at homeless shelters and soup kitchens.

Story continues below
And yet, to hear "When am I getting my own car?" made it seem as if I was raising the stereotypical, overindulged American teenagers who have developed an inordinate sense of entitlement.

Of course, it wasn't just the car. Many of Cassandra's classmates spent spring break this year in Puerto Vallarta, and her best friend got a $1,200 Louis Vuitton handbag for her birthday.

So because Cassandra is a very high-achieving child — an early high school graduate with a 4.7 GPA, a star track athlete, and the president, vice president, and secretary of a few of her high school clubs — I thought I'd up the stakes.

Rather than using timeworn cliches about money not growing on trees, rights versus privileges, or the "When I was growing up in Africa" line, I decided to take the children home for Christmas.

The way that news hit, you'd have thought I'd just grounded my 12-year-old, Blake, for two weeks: What did I do? Africa, the Dark Continent; the jungle. I don't wanna catch AIDS, sleep in mud huts with goats and hens. "No way!" he replied. Blake would rather have had a new skateboard for Christmas. Cassandra was at once apprehensive and excited.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

BYU/Utah game big

Good luck to both teams and may both teams' fans applaud good plays and think...

Logan aims for impact on Wynn

Waaaah! It's all in fun. If you are looking to be offended, you will be...

Letters: Selfish agendas

People are so childish and apparently ignorant that they will sign up the...

Thanks to the Deseret News for posting this each year. It is a great service...

Logan aims for impact on Wynn

As much as some Utah fans would like to think so, Utah isn't nearly as good...

Hey Anonymous~ If you were active LDS you would know that hundreds, if not...

Smith--what do you have against libraries? Have you been in the Farmington...

Could I really the first person to comment on this story? Booz really D-will...

Cougs to host Weber St.

Bub, wow that was quaint. Is the Mtn. still broadcasting in Standard Def,...

Is that a word? See the "uneducated" posts in other articles. Exhibit B

Advertisements