I saw a post today that hit me hard,a friend saying he never wants his kids to suffer like he did. And at first, I nodded along. Of course. Who wants their children to feel that kind of pain? But then I caught myself.
Because every scar I have, every sleepless night, every humiliating "no," every time I had to dig deeper than I thought possible, that’s what forged me. Those struggles weren’t just obstacles; they were the anvil that shaped my resilience, my focus, my ability to stare down life’s chaos without flinching.
Does that mean I’d choose suffering for my children? Never. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: life comes for us all. Rich or poor, sheltered or exposed no one gets a free pass. The question isn’t whether they’ll face trials, but how they’ll meet them.
Money can buy a head start, sure, but not wisdom. A trust fund might cushion the fall, but it won’t teach them to fly. I’ve seen too many heirs to empires crumble under the weight of expectations they never had to build muscle to carry. That’s why Jackie Chan’s choice to leave his kids a name instead of a fortune doesn’t seem cruel to me it’s a gift. A legacy isn’t a safety net; it’s a foundation.
What I want for my children isn’t a life without storms, but the tools to sail through them. Not my answers, but the courage to find their own. Because the world they’ll face won’t be the one I conquered it’ll be fiercer, faster, full of new demons. And if I’ve done my job? They’ll bend without breaking.
At the end of the day, the greatest inheritance isn’t wealth. It’s the unshakable knowledge that they come from people who endured, adapted, and left a mark not in ledgers, but in lives. A good name is better than silver or gold.
Because gold can be stolen. Character? That’s yours forever.
Proverbs 22:1 A GOOD name is rather to be chosen than great riches, and loving favour rather than silver and gold.
Jaydr