HOLIDAY CLOSURE: We will be out of the office on December 25 and back on December 26. You can place orders as usual.

The Porchlight Business Book Awards longlist is here!

Entitlemania: How Not to Spoil Your Kids, and What to Do If You Have

Entitlemania: How Not to Spoil Your Kids, and What to Do If You Have

By Richard Watts

"Entitlemania is an epidemic. Well-intentioned parents across the country are enabling a ''me'' generation of children who lack the wisdom and satisfaction of accomplishment that only struggle and adversity can bring. As a veteran advisor and legal counsel to America's most successful families, Richard Watts has seen the extremes of entitlement up close and wants to help you avoid creating it in your own children.

READ FULL DESCRIPTION

Quantity Price Discount
List Price $15.95  

Quick Quote

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit

Non-returnable discount pricing

$15.95


Book Information

Publisher: Greenleaf Book Group Press
Publish Date: 01/03/2017
Pages: 216
ISBN-13: 9781626343498
ISBN-10: 1626343497
Language: English

Full Description

For everything you give your child, you take something away.
ENTITLEMANIA IS AN EPIDEMIC.
Well-intentioned parents across the country are enabling a "me" generation of children who lack the wisdom and satisfaction of accomplishment that only struggle and adversity can bring. As a veteran advisor and legal counsel to America's most successful families, Richard Watts has seen the extremes of entitlement up close and wants to help you avoid creating it in your own children. Entitlemania will teach you how to redirect kids and repair adults who believe the world owes them something. Your greatest challenge may be learning to control your own actions! ​Entitlemania will provide practical strategies like creating boundaries, walking your talk, and allowing children to fend for themselves. A groundbreaking book that sheds important light on an increasingly pervasive social trend affecting children at every age--and at every income bracket! The big takeaway for parents: You may have to let your children fail so they can learn how to succeed.

About the Author

As personal advisor and legal counsel to the super wealthy, Richard Watts is called on to counsel his clients on some of the most intimate decisions they have to make.

Learn More

We have updated our privacy policy. Click here to read our full policy.