Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unpopular opinion but I’m not a fan of dress up clothes in general. Or even a lot of ultra-specific pretend play toys. Nothing to do with gender. I feel like they’re wasteful, consumerist, artificial, and take away from the imagination. Like do you really need to wear a complete firefighter or princess outfit to pretend you are one? The only valid exceptions IMO are Halloween, school plays, mom and dad’s clothes, and kitchen sets with food. But like, I can do without the ice cream shop storefront complete with ice cream man outfit and truck. A table and mom’s apron should suffice.
+1...why waste money on so many outfits?! ...to play in? Where's the imagination in that?
Anonymous wrote:Unpopular opinion but I’m not a fan of dress up clothes in general. Or even a lot of ultra-specific pretend play toys. Nothing to do with gender. I feel like they’re wasteful, consumerist, artificial, and take away from the imagination. Like do you really need to wear a complete firefighter or princess outfit to pretend you are one? The only valid exceptions IMO are Halloween, school plays, mom and dad’s clothes, and kitchen sets with food. But like, I can do without the ice cream shop storefront complete with ice cream man outfit and truck. A table and mom’s apron should suffice.
Anonymous wrote:
Try to tell us you're a proponent of rigid gender roles without telling us you're a proponent of rigid gender roles.
My son liked pink, red, orange and all warm colors at that age - he said it made him feel warm. He wore pink sneakers. He played with a tea set. He also loved cars and could name all car brands.
Now at 16 he wears navy blue and has a particular interest in the history of warfare and war strategy.
Anonymous wrote:Where do you live, OP? In UMC DMV this would be not weird at all. However, other parts of the country would not be so accepting. My traditional family members would find this weird to “gross.” (I don’t agree with this at all. Just bought DS a bright pink raincoat because that’s the one he picked but my brothers with similar aged kids would have some thoughts on this.)
Anonymous wrote:It's not weird for millennial parents but it is for older GenX parents.