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Cardi B revealed the brutal truth she wants her kids to learn: “I want you to be 100 times better than me; laziness is the one thing I will not tolerate.”

At 34, Cardi B is not just building a legacy in music—she is fiercely shaping the mindset of the next generation in her own household. In an industry where wealth can easily translate into comfort and complacency, Cardi is drawing a hard line: her children will not grow up entitled.

“I want you to be 100 times better than me; laziness is the one thing I will not tolerate.”

That statement is not just tough love—it is a blueprint.

As she navigates a highly publicized separation from Offset after years together, Cardi’s focus has sharpened around her role as a mother. Raising her three young children—Kulture, Wave, and her youngest toddler—she is determined to ensure that their upbringing reflects discipline, not excess.

And she is unapologetic about how she does it.

In candid conversations, Cardi has made it clear that financial success does not excuse a lack of effort. Despite having the resources to give her children anything they want, she intentionally withholds the one thing she believes could harm them most: an easy path. Weekly tutoring, structured expectations, and a constant emphasis on education are non-negotiable in her household.

For Cardi, this approach is deeply personal.

Her work ethic is not something she discovered after fame—it was inherited. Raised with strong influences from her immigrant grandmothers, she grew up understanding that survival and success required hustle, resilience, and accountability. Those values, she believes, are too important to be diluted by privilege.

So she is passing them on—intact.

What makes her stance especially striking is how directly it challenges a common celebrity parenting narrative. In many high-profile families, wealth becomes a cushion that softens consequences. Cardi rejects that entirely. She does not want her children to rely on her name, her money, or her success.

She wants them to earn their own.

Her language may be blunt—warning her kids not to become “bums”—but the intention behind it is clear. She is not trying to intimidate them; she is trying to prepare them. She understands that the world outside their home will not treat them as special simply because of who their mother is.

And she refuses to let them believe otherwise.

There is also a deeper message embedded in her approach: success is not just about reaching a certain level—it is about surpassing it. By telling her children she expects them to be “100 times better,” Cardi is reframing legacy. It is not about maintaining what she built. It is about expanding beyond it.

That perspective turns parenting into something active, not passive.

She is not just providing for her children—she is training them. Teaching them that discipline matters. That effort matters. That character is not inherited—it is developed.

In doing so, Cardi B is redefining what it means to raise children in the spotlight.

Because in her world, wealth is not the goal.

Work ethic is.