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When Money Becomes the Third Parent in the House

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In many homes today, parenting is no longer a conversation between two adults or even between parent and child. There is a third presence at the table. It sits quietly during dinner, interrupts bedtime routines, dictates school choices, and fuels arguments behind closed doors. That presence is money.

For a growing number of families, finances have stopped being a background concern and have instead taken centre stage, shaping daily decisions and emotional climates in ways parents rarely anticipate.

The Invisible Authority in the Home

Money does not speak, but children hear it. They hear it in hushed conversations about rent, in postponed shopping trips, in the tension that fills the room when school fee reminders arrive. Over time, children learn to read financial stress long before they understand numbers.

Parents often believe they are shielding their children by not explaining financial struggles. Yet children notice patterns: why certain needs are delayed, why tempers are shorter at month-end, why one parent seems perpetually absent physically or emotionally because they are working longer hours.

When money becomes the silent authority in the home, it starts to influence parenting styles. Some parents become overly permissive, compensating for financial absence with gifts or leniency. Others grow strict and controlling, driven by fear of scarcity. Neither extreme is intentional, but both are rooted in financial pressure.

Provider Pressure and Emotional Distance

In many households, especially where one parent carries the bulk of financial responsibility, money becomes tied to identity. Being a “good parent” quietly turns into being a good provider. Emotional presence takes second place to provision.

This pressure is particularly heavy on fathers, but increasingly affects mothers too. Long hours, side hustles, and constant financial calculations leave little room for rest, let alone emotional connection. Children may have their needs met, yet still feel unseen.

Parents, on the other hand, feel unappreciated. “After all I do for this family,” becomes an unspoken refrain. Resentment builds, not because love is absent, but because exhaustion is overwhelming.

When Children Start Carrying Adult Worries

One of the least discussed impacts of financial stress is parentification, when children begin to take on adult emotional roles. A child who hears frequent money-related conflict may try to “be good” to reduce pressure, suppressing their own needs. Others internalise guilt, believing their existence is a financial burden.

Statements like “We can’t afford that” or “Money doesn’t grow on trees” are common and often harmless. But when repeated in emotionally charged moments, they can shape how children view themselves and their worth.

Teenagers may respond differently. Some become resentful, comparing their lives to peers. Others rush into work too early, driven by anxiety rather than readiness. In both cases, money quietly rewrites childhood timelines.

Financial Conflict as a Relationship Stressor

Money disagreements are among the most common sources of conflict in marriages and partnerships. Yet the argument is rarely just about numbers. It is about priorities, power, fear, and unmet expectations.

When couples do not agree on spending, saving, or financial goals, children absorb the tension. They learn conflict styles by observation—silence, shouting, withdrawal, or blame. Over time, money stops being a tool and becomes a trigger.

In single-parent households, the strain can be even heavier. The absence of shared financial responsibility often leads to burnout, with little room for vulnerability. Strength becomes survival, and emotional needs, both parent and child are postponed indefinitely.

Reclaiming Parenting from Financial Stress

Money will always be part of family life. The goal is not to remove it from the home, but to stop it from parenting your children for you.

This begins with honest, age-appropriate conversations. Children do not need full financial disclosure, but they benefit from clarity and reassurance. Explaining that some choices are financial, not personal, reduces anxiety and self-blame.

Parents also need spaces to talk about money away from children. Not every disagreement needs an audience. Protecting children from adult financial conflict is not secrecy, it is emotional safety.

Equally important is redefining provision. Showing up emotionally, listening, apologising when wrong, and creating moments of connection cost little, yet mean everything. Children remember presence long after they forget prices.

Teaching Healthy Money Narratives

Children learn about money primarily through observation. Parents who model balance, working hard while still resting, planning while still enjoying life, teach resilience. Those who separate self-worth from income teach security.

Simple practices help:

  • Avoid using money as a measure of love or success.

  • Involve children in small budgeting conversations to build understanding, not fear.

  • Celebrate non-material wins: effort, kindness, growth.

These lessons shape how children will one day parent their own families.

More Than Survival

Raising children in financially uncertain times is not a failure, it is a reality for many families. What matters is not perfection, but intention. Money can support parenting, but it should never replace it.

When parents reclaim emotional presence, communicate openly, and remember that love is not measured in receipts, money returns to its rightful place, as a tool, not a parent.

Because at the end of the day, children don’t need wealthy parents. They need present ones.

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Cover Story

Heartbreak as Body of 12-Year-Old Blessed Claire Muthoni Arrives Home from India

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Kenyans are mourning the loss of Blessed Claire Muthoni, a brave 12-year-old girl from Kihuri in Othaya, Nyeri County, who passed away while undergoing specialised cancer treatment in New Delhi. Claire had been fighting stage 4 cancer for over three years.

The aggressive disease took a heavy toll on her young body, eventually leading to the amputation of one of her legs. Despite the pain and the many challenges she faced, Claire remained hopeful and courageous throughout her journey, inspiring many who followed her story.

On January 19, 2026, she travelled to India with her mother in search of advanced treatment aimed at saving her remaining leg and managing the cancer that had spread to her lungs. The journey was filled with hope, supported by Kenyans from all walks of life who contributed towards her treatment and kept her in their prayers.

A brave fight

While in India, Claire underwent several chemotherapy sessions. Unfortunately, her condition worsened after developing complications, leading to her admission to the Intensive Care Unit. She passed away in hospital last week, leaving behind a grieving family and a nation that had stood with her.

On Monday, March 30, 2026, her remains arrived at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport. The atmosphere at the airport was filled with grief as family members, friends and well-wishers gathered to receive her. Her mother returned home alone, carrying a loss no parent should have to endure.

Claire will be laid to rest in her home area of Othaya in the coming days, as her family begins the difficult process of saying their final goodbyes.

Her story touched thousands across the country, many of whom followed her journey through updates and fundraising efforts. She became a symbol of strength and resilience, and her passing has deeply affected those who had hoped to see her recover.

Beyond the grief, her story has once again brought attention to the challenges families face when dealing with childhood cancer in Kenya. The high cost of specialised treatment, limited access to advanced care locally, and the emotional and financial strain on families often force many to seek treatment abroad.

Read our March issue here 

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Cover Story

Heartbreak as Body of 12-Year-Old Blessed Claire Muthoni Arrives Home from India

Published

on

Kenyans are mourning the loss of Blessed Claire Muthoni, a brave 12-year-old girl from Kihuri in Othaya, Nyeri County, who passed away while undergoing specialised cancer treatment in New Delhi. Claire had been fighting stage 4 cancer for over three years.

The aggressive disease took a heavy toll on her young body, eventually leading to the amputation of one of her legs. Despite the pain and the many challenges she faced, Claire remained hopeful and courageous throughout her journey, inspiring many who followed her story.

On January 19, 2026, she travelled to India with her mother in search of advanced treatment aimed at saving her remaining leg and managing the cancer that had spread to her lungs. The journey was filled with hope, supported by Kenyans from all walks of life who contributed towards her treatment and kept her in their prayers.

A brave fight

While in India, Claire underwent several chemotherapy sessions. Unfortunately, her condition worsened after developing complications, leading to her admission to the Intensive Care Unit. She passed away in hospital last week, leaving behind a grieving family and a nation that had stood with her.

On Monday, March 30, 2026, her remains arrived at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport. The atmosphere at the airport was filled with grief as family members, friends and well-wishers gathered to receive her. Her mother returned home alone, carrying a loss no parent should have to endure.

Claire will be laid to rest in her home area of Othaya in the coming days, as her family begins the difficult process of saying their final goodbyes.

Her story touched thousands across the country, many of whom followed her journey through updates and fundraising efforts. She became a symbol of strength and resilience, and her passing has deeply affected those who had hoped to see her recover.

Beyond the grief, her story has once again brought attention to the challenges families face when dealing with childhood cancer in Kenya. The high cost of specialised treatment, limited access to advanced care locally, and the emotional and financial strain on families often force many to seek treatment abroad.

Read our March issue here 

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Cover Story

Shock as Section of Gikomba Shoe Market Demolished Overnight

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Traders at Nairobi’s bustling Gikomba Market are counting heavy losses after a section of the popular shoe market (mitumba shoe section) was demolished overnight by Nairobi City County enforcement teams. The operation took place in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

Videos and photos circulating on social media show destroyed merchandise and devastated traders who arrived at the market this morning to find their businesses in ruins. According to reports, the county government carried out the demolition after an eviction notice lapsed. This happened even though the High Court (Environment and Land Court) had earlier issued and extended conservatory orders in March 2026, halting mass demolitions and evictions at Gikomba and surrounding areas along the Nairobi River.

Repeated demolitions

Demolitions at Gikomba are not new. As far back as 1977, the original market was brought down by the government to pave the way for light industries. In recent years, attention has shifted to the riparian land along the Nairobi River, with authorities proposing to expand the buffer zone from 30 metres to 50 metres in a bid to control flooding.

Many traders have raised concerns over what they describe as poor consultation, shifting relocation plans and the lack of a clear and secure alternative site. There are also growing fears that the process could open the door to land grabbing and cartel involvement.

Impact

For most traders at Gikomba, the market is more than just a place of business. It is their only source of livelihood. Repeated fires and demolitions have created a cycle of uncertainty, financial strain and constant rebuilding. Many small business owners say they struggle to recover after each loss, only to face another setback months later.

Calls for improved fire safety measures, fair relocation plans and meaningful engagement with authorities continue to grow louder. Without long term and sustainable solutions, Gikomba traders will continue to bear the high cost of operating in one of Nairobi’s busiest yet most vulnerable markets.

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