On occasion there have been exceptions -- such when one of them can't go trick-or-treating or something. I forget what we did then, but we may have taxed the others in a kind of income-redistribution, and we may have provided some of the leftovers that we hadn't given away to trick-or-treaters.
And they usually conduct a trading session on Nov 1 when they trade things they don't like for things they do -- learning negotiating skills in the process.
By the way, from almost before they can count we've given them an allowance. In the earliest years they tended to spend it on candy, making excruciatingly difficult decisions on how to spend their 5 or ten cents. The allowance was always enough to buy *something* meaningful to them. But never enough to buy everything. I remember seemingly endless change-making sessions in which they traded a nickle for five pennies with me, and then back again. It got tedious sometimes, but they did start to learn about money and counting that way. But I wish the stores would all post prices that *included* sales tax -- it makes it so so much harder for a four-year-old to understand prices when they have to add 15%.
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And they usually conduct a trading session on Nov 1 when they trade things they don't like for things they do -- learning negotiating skills in the process.
By the way, from almost before they can count we've given them an allowance. In the earliest years they tended to spend it on candy, making excruciatingly difficult decisions on how to spend their 5 or ten cents. The allowance was always enough to buy *something* meaningful to them. But never enough to buy everything. I remember seemingly endless change-making sessions in which they traded a nickle for five pennies with me, and then back again. It got tedious sometimes, but they did start to learn about money and counting that way. But I wish the stores would all post prices that *included* sales tax -- it makes it so so much harder for a four-year-old to understand prices when they have to add 15%.