Quick Shopping Tip: To Avoid Tantrums and Overspending, Whip Out Your Phone and Lie to Your Kids

Every parent has been in this situation: You’re in the toy aisle, your kid has an eye on one or twelve toys he just has to have, and you don’t want to buy it—at least not at that price, not in front of the child, and not at this time of year. What do you do to get out of the store without buying the thing, and without a major freakout?

A brilliant Parent Hacks tip provides the solution:

When my kids start begging for a toy, and I feel the negotiations are about to begin, I just pull out my iPhone and tell them to pose with the toy and I’ll take a picture and “email it to Santa.” I show them the picture, they put the toy back (instinctively, which is funny), and we’re on our way.

Not only are negotiations ended and tantrums avoided, the kids are all jazzed up thinking I’m getting in touch with Santa, and my dad has Santa’s e-mail address! How cool is that! As extra-extra bonuses, you get some cute pictures of your very excited kids, and if any children claim that they never really wanted the gifts appearing under the tree on Christmas morning, you have photographic evidence to prove them wrong.

Related Topics: cell phone, Christmas, families & children, gifts, holiday shopping, Santa Claus, toys
  • http://allbummedout.wordpress.com allbummedout

    Here’s how to teach kids the reality of business:

    Explain that if the child finds the toy online, for every dollar the child saves over the price of THIS toy, the child will receive 10% of that savings. This is an opportunity to explain that 10% is equivalent to ONE DOLLAR for every TEN DOLLARS in savings. Provide an example: If the toy is $70 at Toys ‘R Us, and the child finds the toy online for $50, that is a savings of 70 – 50 = 20 or twenty dollars. The child would receive 10% of that savings or $2. Point out that 10% is a very generous commission by corporate standards.

    This is one way, when life hands you lemons, to make lemonade… weaning the child off la-la-land to the real corporate world of entrepreneurship.

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