What? He’s 6. Would you prefer that he live an uncharmed life? Your post is just dumb. Plenty of people are horrible, including grandmas. Why should they get special treatment. |
Honest mistake means she maybe put each figure into two or three pieces pieces to move it. Actually dismantling multiple sets takes a lot of effort and time and is a conscious decision to break up a kid’s toy. Grandma is not owed very much in this scenario. |
I would call it evil. |
+1. Nothing like this architecture is a “mess” that needs to be broken apart and mixed into other LEGO pieces. ![]() |
She literally broke down something her grandson built. No grandmother to a little boy would think this is something innocent to do. Unless she is like 92 and totally removed from the roaring 20s. Then to scold the child?
OP, what did you end up doing? Sorry if I missed a precious update. |
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From this:
![]() To This: ![]() This is intentionally taking down a creation and making it difficult to rebuild. It’s malicious. |
The playroom was clean. It was a lego creation on a kid table. The kids playroom is supposed to have kids play things. Surely grandma knew this was 6yo play space. It’s not like she hasn’t seen him playing in that room for the last 6yrs. |
This right here. Should grandma apologize? Yes, and it's okay to ask her to do that. But then it's going to be up to her whether or not she chooses to cooperate with that request. Coping with the disappointment needs to be a separate thing from whether grandma apologizes "well enough" or helps with putting the set back together or whatever. All of those things are nice extras, but it's unhelpful in general in life to make your emotional response contingent upon what someone else does/doesn't do. One is a relationship issue and the other is your own emotional maturity. (e.g. it is more emotionally mature to learn to cope with disappointment and less emotionally mature to not be able to feel well unless certain things out of your control happen). |
Obviously never felt with Legos. |
https://brickset.com/sets/6086-1/Black-Knight-s-Castle My castle was $85, which is why it was my only Christmas present from Santa. I don’t remember which ship my sister got the same Christmas. I do remember that every birthday and Christmas for the next couple years featured either an Imperial or Pirate ship or building. All were “big” sets. As I said, I don’t remember which set my brother got, but since he was 4 years younger, he was getting duplo sets when we got legos. I know he got the number train, letter building and numerous zoo sets. Trying to say there weren’t sets 20-40 years and that’s why she didn’t know is ridiculous, false and shifting blame. |
I think grandma should re buy the set and then go home. She did a lot of damage —she will never apologize— and best put it into the past ASAP. Grandma is a mean snoopy b***ch |
Grandma is 100% in the wrong. The playroom wasn't messy. It's obvious when a Lego set is assembled. They're designed to look finished. Even something that a child made that isn't taken from instructions is obviously different than a mess of random Legos in a pile on the floor.
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OP posted an update several pages back. Sounds like Grandma realized she screwed up. Grandpa was going to help the boy reassemble.
So many people on here saying that Grandma was just trying to help clean up and the boy is coddled are missing the point. Cleaning up? Yes, a mistake. Scolding the boy? How dare she. Out of line on so many levels. That's the sticking point with me. The thought of that happening to my (now grown, previously Lego-obsessed) son hurts my heart. Those sets were his prized possessions. This child is going to remember what happened forever. |