sandelf
Putting it another way - quite refreshing she has not been taught to grab even when she has no need! Honestly, it may feel bad, but she is just 8. Not really worth a row.
Yes. Eight is a funny age, and maybe equivalent to when we were 12 or 13, as they grow up faster. Maybe she'd seen an adult refusing change in the hairdresser or a taxi, saying 'it's ok, I don't want that', and thought it was a grown up thing to do, or maybe all sorts of things.
I agree that it's nice to be appreciated, but there is such a lot of angst over children/young people not being grateful enough, and it's such a shame. Times change, and the things that we were grateful for may be 'everyday' items now, and that's not necessarily a bad thing. As an example, my mum was a child in the war, when sweets were scarce, and an adult who gave her chocolate was a hero. In my day, adults who remembered that thrill always gave us sweets when we saw them, and as we had little pocket money it was very welcome, but probably not as exciting as it was for my mum. By the time my children came along, however, it was normal to put a bag of fun size chocolate bars into the trolley when shopping, plus we only allowed them to have one a day, so visiting adults' offerings were added to the 'sweet drawer' and rationed in the same way. They actually benefited me more than the children, as if the drawer got full I didn't need to buy any more
. Of course the children weren't as excited by a bar of chocolate as my mother and her friends would have been. I hope my children always said thank you, but when they are young it can be difficult to feign gratitude.
Chocolate was just an example, but I'm sure it is the same with money, toys and other things. That doesn't mean that the children are 'spoiled', just that they are well provided for, which should be a cause for celebration, not hurt. You can't buy love, and being grateful to someone is not the same as loving them anyway. Sometimes it is a form of control.