As a First-World Parent, Am I Setting My Child Up to Never be Content?

Parenting lessons from developing countries.

June Kirri
Modern Women

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Four boys sitting on the grass smiling.
Photo by Robert Collins on Unsplash

I was brought up by Nepali parents in Japan in the 1980s. I witnessed both cultures firsthand.

In Tokyo, we had an abundant array of colorful TV channels. Back in Kathmandu, my cousins had a choice between two black and white channels.

Restless and bored — that’s what I remember sitting cross-legged in front of a TV with my Nepali cousins, their eyes glued to the screen as if they were watching Spiderman.

As I raise a 3-year-old son with my German husband in Germany, a first-world country, I think about those vacations in Nepal playing hopscotch and throwing a small ball at a makeshift rock house built from scratch.

I wonder, in a country that has everything a child could want, am I raising my son to never be content?

Choices

My dad walked 10 kilometers to and fro school as a child in Kathmandu. His shoes wore out quickly, but the family had no money to buy a replacement.

He sewed them up but they fell apart in no time. Forced to walk bare foot, he was covered in sores and blisters.

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June Kirri
Modern Women

🇯🇵🇳🇵🇺🇸 in 🇩🇪 | Publisher of Bitchy & Sista Publications | Ex- journalist & magazine editor I Feminism, women, & motherhood | https://linktr.ee/junekirri