Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids get kit. Build kit. Kit stays built for ~1 week to one month, eventually breaks and goes into the big Lego box. Legos in Lego box get turned into some cool creation, which floats around the house for a while before breaking (or exhausting my patience) and getting returned to the Lego box. Rinse and repeat.
This is my Lego philosophy.
Anonymous wrote:OP here:
Thank you! This is such a funny thread.
Here's the thing. Maybe I have some sort of issue but it really bothers me that a set does not get put together before it gets put in the bin, forever, never to be put together. I feel disappointed. That said, I am not good at Legos. at all.
I'll break out another little set and see how it goes. We'll try it together since I think he did this one himself.
FWIW, these were all gifts. I got used legos off a mom listserve in bins. They are great for free play. I like to organize them while he likes to build. We all have our fun!
Finally, yes, if i step on it, I yell too; and make threats I'll never carry out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids get kit. Build kit. Kit stays built for ~1 week to one month, eventually breaks and goes into the big Lego box. Legos in Lego box get turned into some cool creation, which floats around the house for a while before breaking (or exhausting my patience) and getting returned to the Lego box. Rinse and repeat.
This is my Lego philosophy.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like a typical 6 year can do all the $10 to $25 sets if they are interested in Lego. Those are generally less than 200 pieces and the instructions are all pictures. I'd let him at those. My fairly typical 6 year can do most sets up to 500 pieces with no help from us and has been doing those smaller sets independently for well over a year.
Anonymous wrote:Kids get kit. Build kit. Kit stays built for ~1 week to one month, eventually breaks and goes into the big Lego box. Legos in Lego box get turned into some cool creation, which floats around the house for a while before breaking (or exhausting my patience) and getting returned to the Lego box. Rinse and repeat.
Anonymous wrote:Most 6 year olds should be able to do these small sets by themselves. Both of mine were, at 3.5-4 years of age, following the instructions. And if he doesn't enjoy following the instructions, he'll be creative, even better! At 8 yrs old, say, these small sets will be way too easy, so open them now.[/quote]
The bold part. You don't want to hold it until it is too young for your child.
Anonymous wrote:Just when I thought I was mastering this parenting thing...I need a lego philosophy?