The price of possessiveness: how parental materialism undermines child psychological wellbeing.

Frontiers in child and adolescent psychiatry Pub Date : 2025-08-07 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/frcha.2025.1600599
Miao Li
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Abstract

Materialism, a value system that places the pursuit of possessions at the core of happiness and life meaning, is a dominant cultural force in modern societies. While its associations with individual well-being are well-documented, its intergenerational implications remain understudied. This study conceptualizes materialism as a potential family stressor contributing to the intergenerational transmission of stress. An intergenerational crossover model of materialism was tested using data from 1,996 parent-child pairs in Zhengzhou, China. Results indicate that higher parental materialism is associated with stronger materialistic values in children, weaker family relationships, and more frequent parental comparisons, each of which is linked to greater psychological distress in youth. These patterns suggest that materialism may contribute to intergenerational patterns of vulnerability. The study highlights the cultural dimensions of mental health and provides a theoretical tool for further research on how materialism, as modernity's "default value", relates to health inequalities.

Abstract Image

占有欲的代价:父母的物质主义如何破坏孩子的心理健康。
唯物主义是一种将追求财富置于幸福和人生意义核心的价值体系,是现代社会的主导文化力量。虽然它与个人幸福的关系是有据可查的,但其代际影响仍未得到充分研究。这项研究将物质主义概念化为一种潜在的家庭压力源,有助于压力的代际传递。利用郑州市1996对亲子数据,对物质主义代际交叉模型进行了检验。结果表明,父母的物质主义程度越高,子女的物质主义价值观越强,家庭关系越弱,父母之间的攀比越频繁,而这些都与青少年更大的心理困扰有关。这些模式表明物质主义可能导致了代际间的脆弱性模式。这项研究强调了心理健康的文化维度,并为进一步研究唯物主义作为现代性的“默认价值观”与健康不平等之间的关系提供了理论工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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