Literature DB >> 4085614

Children of the rich.

F S Pittman.   

Abstract

Growing up rich is not an unmixed blessing. Great wealth has undoubted benefits, but it is not good for children. It distorts their functional relationship with the world, it belittles their own accomplishments, and it grotesquely amplifies their sense of what is good enough. It is addictive. Wealth may even become a barrier to a relationship with a therapist. One job of a therapist to the rich is to teach people how to be middle class and to achieve moderately, and to teach rich parents to accept such unmagnificent normality. The rich, of course, have all the same problems other people have, perhaps complicated by the wealth, perhaps just frustratingly unrelieved by the wealth. Suggestions are made for treating these unfortunate victims of excess and for overcoming the therapist's naïve counter-transference reactions to the families of the rich.

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Year:  1985        PMID: 4085614     DOI: 10.1111/j.1545-5300.1985.00461.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Fam Process        ISSN: 0014-7370


  4 in total

1.  Extracurricular involvement among affluent youth: a scapegoat for "ubiquitous achievement pressures"?

Authors:  Suniya S Luthar; Karen A Shoum; Pamela J Brown
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2006-05

Review 2.  The high price of affluence.

Authors:  Suniya S Luthar; Chris C Sexton
Journal:  Adv Child Dev Behav       Date:  2004

3.  Comparable "risks" at the socioeconomic status extremes: preadolescents' perceptions of parenting.

Authors:  Suniya S Luthar; Shawn J Latendresse
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2005

Review 4.  The culture of affluence: psychological costs of material wealth.

Authors:  Suniya S Luthar
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2003 Nov-Dec
  4 in total

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