Boy toys and girl toys
Are there such things?
Why? Why not?

Are there such things?
Why? Why not?
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Care to clarify? I mean my boys might have played with Barbie but they would be most likely to decapitate her under enemy fire. Care to clarify? I mean my boys might have played with Barbie but they would be most likely to decapitate her under enemy fire.
Is it not more likely boys & girls play with the same toys differently?
My opinion is some of the difference is inborn and if you act "natural" about it the boys act like boys and the girls act like girls...
By 1 year David was loving all things with wheels and driving them around and making car noises.... but Maya at the same age has absolutely no interest in cars at all, she seems to like a lot of what is considered "gender neutral" toys and also her baby doll, which she has tried to feed a bottle already....
At 3 David is in more of the pretend stage, he likes to pretend cook and set up all the Little People, and since he has a baby sister it seems natural to me that he should sometimes pretend with a baby doll that he's taking care of her. His daddy takes care of babies too.
So while there do seem to be some gender differences, they are not so wide as we are lead to believe through toy marketing and stuff...
I don't think its anything to worry about...
edit-- so basically I agree with everyone who posted before me, in case that wasn't clear![]()
While I only have boys I have to say that I don't really restrict my boys to what one would call "boy" toys....if my boys go to someones house and are playing with a baby doll I'm not going to take it away and tell them boys don't play with dolls....however one night my son came out to me and proudly announced he was a princess...because he had on a sleeping shirt that was very long..he was only 2 and a half...so we explained that boys can be princes and girls can be princesses...now they both understand the difference.
nope.Boy toys and girl toys
Are there such things?
Why? Why not?
![]()
Boy toys and girl toys
Are there such things?
Why? Why not?
![]()
My opinion is some of the difference is inborn and if you act "natural" about it the boys act like boys and the girls act like girls...
By 1 year David was loving all things with wheels and driving them around and making car noises.... but Maya at the same age has absolutely no interest in cars at all, she seems to like a lot of what is considered "gender neutral" toys and also her baby doll, which she has tried to feed a bottle already....
At 3 David is in more of the pretend stage, he likes to pretend cook and set up all the Little People, and since he has a baby sister it seems natural to me that he should sometimes pretend with a baby doll that he's taking care of her. His daddy takes care of babies too.
So while there do seem to be some gender differences, they are not so wide as we are lead to believe through toy marketing and stuff...
I don't think its anything to worry about...
edit-- so basically I agree with everyone who posted before me, in case that wasn't clear![]()
Care to clarify? I mean my boys might have played with Barbie but they would be most likely to decapitate her under enemy fire.
Is it not more likely boys & girls play with the same toys differently?
I guess I'll go against the PC answer and say, I think there are such things as boy toys and girl toys.
If I were to walk into a room that mostly consisted toys such as baby dolls and My Little Pony, I would assume it was a girls room because those are girlish kind of toys. If I were to walk into a room that mostly consisted toys such as cars, little army dudes and action figures, I would assume it was a boys room because those toys seem boyish.
In saying that...It doesn't bother me at all when my boys play with "girlish" toys...."girl or boy" toys doesn't mean they have to be limited to only playing with something pink or something blue.