Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sell the other Legos, he will never notice. Then get him the new Legos with his newly-found lego fund.
Well, I probably wouldn’t practice lying to him or being deceptive.
Anonymous wrote:NP here and I would like to know what to do with the jumble of legos. Where should I donate or sell? What are the options for Lego rehoming?
Anonymous wrote:My 30 yo nephew still buys them. He is a successful engineer and swears Lego contributed to his smart brain
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all are missing my point.
He used to play with Legos 2-to 3 hours at a time, building all sorts of things. Now he stopped doing that. Additionally, the last few sets he's built once and never looked back. When I say he doesn't even display them, I mean that to me it seems he is treating Legos as a throw-away thing, like a Kiwi Tinker Crate. Which he does have and enjoys it. I am sorry, but $300 for a few hours of tinkering makes no sense to me.
But I am interested in selling Legos, where would I go? They are not sorted by model, unfortunately. It's just bins and bins of plastic.
I hear you, OP. You sound like I did 2 years ago (my son is now 14). We had tubs and tubs of Legos that were never touched after the initial build. I eased him out of Lego by insisting that only the "favorites" were saved (they were all mixed together), and that half had to be thrown out. Over the next year, he asked for one or two special sets, but the rule was "one in, some out". I also guided him into "cooler" stuff that he never considered before. Don't listen to the nasty replies to your question. You're not anti-toy!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all are missing my point.
He used to play with Legos 2-to 3 hours at a time, building all sorts of things. Now he stopped doing that. Additionally, the last few sets he's built once and never looked back. When I say he doesn't even display them, I mean that to me it seems he is treating Legos as a throw-away thing, like a Kiwi Tinker Crate. Which he does have and enjoys it. I am sorry, but $300 for a few hours of tinkering makes no sense to me.
But I am interested in selling Legos, where would I go? They are not sorted by model, unfortunately. It's just bins and bins of plastic.
I hear you, OP. You sound like I did 2 years ago (my son is now 14). We had tubs and tubs of Legos that were never touched after the initial build. I eased him out of Lego by insisting that only the "favorites" were saved (they were all mixed together), and that half had to be thrown out. Over the next year, he asked for one or two special sets, but the rule was "one in, some out". I also guided him into "cooler" stuff that he never considered before. Don't listen to the nasty replies to your question. You're not anti-toy!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all are missing my point.
He used to play with Legos 2-to 3 hours at a time, building all sorts of things. Now he stopped doing that. Additionally, the last few sets he's built once and never looked back. When I say he doesn't even display them, I mean that to me it seems he is treating Legos as a throw-away thing, like a Kiwi Tinker Crate. Which he does have and enjoys it. I am sorry, but $300 for a few hours of tinkering makes no sense to me.
But I am interested in selling Legos, where would I go? They are not sorted by model, unfortunately. It's just bins and bins of plastic.
I hear you, OP. You sound like I did 2 years ago (my son is now 14). We had tubs and tubs of Legos that were never touched after the initial build. I eased him out of Lego by insisting that only the "favorites" were saved (they were all mixed together), and that half had to be thrown out. Over the next year, he asked for one or two special sets, but the rule was "one in, some out". I also guided him into "cooler" stuff that he never considered before. Don't listen to the nasty replies to your question. You're not anti-toy!
Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all are missing my point.
He used to play with Legos 2-to 3 hours at a time, building all sorts of things. Now he stopped doing that. Additionally, the last few sets he's built once and never looked back. When I say he doesn't even display them, I mean that to me it seems he is treating Legos as a throw-away thing, like a Kiwi Tinker Crate. Which he does have and enjoys it. I am sorry, but $300 for a few hours of tinkering makes no sense to me.
But I am interested in selling Legos, where would I go? They are not sorted by model, unfortunately. It's just bins and bins of plastic.
Anonymous wrote:I'll be 54 this year and still get toys for my birthday. My partner is 40 and I just bought him a couple of Star Wars Lego sets. I also get him the wooden 3d puzzle sets like a clock or a marble machine.
I'm sad for your son that you think 11 is too old for toys.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all are missing my point.
He used to play with Legos 2-to 3 hours at a time, building all sorts of things. Now he stopped doing that. Additionally, the last few sets he's built once and never looked back. When I say he doesn't even display them, I mean that to me it seems he is treating Legos as a throw-away thing, like a Kiwi Tinker Crate. Which he does have and enjoys it. I am sorry, but $300 for a few hours of tinkering makes no sense to me.
But I am interested in selling Legos, where would I go? They are not sorted by model, unfortunately. It's just bins and bins of plastic.