Parenting

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

I Don't Buy Lots of Toys. Am I Depriving My Child?


Last week I took Leo, my eight-month-old son, on a play date and we decided to give his friend Cameron's Exersaucer a trial run. Watching that huge smile as he pedaled his feet and banged on the plastic piano keys, I felt a not unfamiliar pang of guilt.

Leo doesn't have an Exersaucer. Or a Jumperoo. He doesn't have portable spoons and snack jars or a Peapod tent for napping on the road. He doesn't even have a nursery. He sleeps in a crib an arm's length from my bed and his changing table consists of a hand towel spread across the foot of that same bed.

Partly by choice and partly by necessity, I'm raising my son in a very minimalist style. I'm a single mother, temporarily residing in an apartment in my parents' basement. We don't have much space or money, so he doesn't have much stuff. I'm also a firm believer in doing all I can to fight the "you are what you own" messages that flood our kids the second they walk out the front door.

In part I'm proud to invest him with non-materialistic values. But at times I feel guilty too. I'm not entirely convinced that never having a slate of developmental toys, a library full of books or a fancy birthday party won't actually hurt him in some way. What if in my efforts to pare down, I neglect to provide Leo with some crucial item that really would make him a happier, more successful, more well-rounded kid?

When I browse through the Pottery Barn Kids catalogue or spot a Bugaboo on the street, I feel pretty confident. Leo will turn out just fine without those things. But the border between want and need isn't always so clear. Earlier this summer, Leo and I took a trip to the East Coast and stayed for a couple of weeks with friends, intellectuals who share my minimalist parenting philosophy. Toys hadn't consumed their apartment, but it did contain stack upon teetering stack of children's books in four languages.

"We don't spend on clothes or toys," my friend explained. "But we do buy books. We're language people, and we feel like that's a critical part of education."

Again the wash of guilt. I'm a language person too. Will reading Leo the same ten board books we inherited from a friend somehow stymie him intellectually? My friends' two-year-old daughter is indeed breathtakingly precocious, bilingual and already working on language number three. I came home from that trip twenty dollars poorer for having invested in a pair of French children's books that so far Leo's only tried to eat.

Read the second half of the articlehere.
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Comments 21-24 of 24
  • Disgruntled's Avatar
    Posted by Disgruntled Mon Nov 24, 2008 9:18am PST

    We were dirt poor when we had my son, and yes I do occasionally feel guilty that my son didn't have a lot of nice things when he was a baby and toddler. However, he's 15 now and trust me, he doesn't care that he didn't have a changing table or a nice stroller when he was a baby. He felt loved and cared for and that was enough.

    I've met kids who have literally every single thing they could possibly want. They're brats who don't appreciate a darned thing and are constantly wanting new things. My own niece is like this. She has more toys than she could ever play with and is always asking for more. She also has to constantly be the center of attention. I have no clue how she'll cope as an adult when everything isn't all about her.

    As for your own child, consignment shops can be your friend. Most baby clothes and toys barely get used before their outgrown so it's kind of a waste to buy them new. (Heck, it's even more environmentally friendly NOT to buy them new. Tell your friends his stuff is "vintage.") Also, if you need books, go to your local library. I work in a library and we have books and videos available to check out for kids of all ages. We also have storytime for kids, including one just for toddlers. Being broke doesn't mean you can't still be a good parent. You just have to be a little more creative.

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  • 's Avatar
    Posted by Mon Nov 24, 2008 1:29pm PST

    I think the important thing is quality, not quantity. By quality I don't mean how expensive but how much play value there is. At 3 years old, my kids absolutely loved scotch tape! They had a few expensive toys but they ones that they played with for years such as a toy kitchen. I also refused to buy anything with a microchip. I emphasized anything with lots of creativity and books and they're incredibly creative teens now.

    Don't give in to the pressure, do what seems right to you!

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  • a's Avatar
    Posted by a Fri Nov 20, 2009 8:16pm PST

    The answer is no. Actually it is the other way around; children in wealthy families who have a lot are at a higher risk to get into trouble once they become teenagers. A lot of specific toys retrain the imaginative world of a child.

    Books are important, but there are libraries. You can use your local library and only buy the books your child asks for over and over again. Do not worry about reading when he's 3 or some other stupid thing that parents seem obsessed with. Do not worry about having a bilingual child when he's just a toddler.

    The following books may help you put your mind at ease( you'll find them at the library):

    The Case for Make Believe: Saving Play in a Commercialized World by Susan Linn

    Einstein Never Used Flashcards: How Our Children Really Learn--and Why They Need to Play More and Memorize Less by Roberta Michnick Golinkoff Ph.D., Kathy Hirsh-Pasek Ph.D., and Diane Eyer Ph.D.

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