Anonymous wrote:Thanks to everyone. This is helpful for me and I'm definitely going to rethink how I've been going about this. DH and I have talked to him about never playing guns at school because the teachers have ASKED us to discuss it with him (I'd love for them to handle it on their own at school, but they've involved us deliberately). I think I will allow his imagination to dictate if he plays guns or not instead of saying "NO" every time it presents itself. Just not sure if I can take the leap to buy him toys that look like guns, even water guns.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in the era where candy cigarettes were a thing. You can't get them now, but even if I could, I would not. Not because I think millions of kids became smokers because of candy or that kids can't tell the difference, but because smoking is not something we value or support. Same with guns and gun play. I don't think you have to believe guns will turn your kid into a serial killer to not want that to be part of their play experience. Be
I grew up in the era where candy cigarettes were a thing. You can't get them now, but even if I could, I would not. Not because I think millions of kids became smokers because of candy or that kids can't tell the difference, but because smoking is not something we value or support. Same with guns and gun play. I don't think you have to believe guns will turn your kid into a serial killer to not want that to be part of their play experience. Be
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in the era where candy cigarettes were a thing. You can't get them now, but even if I could, I would not. Not because I think millions of kids became smokers because of candy or that kids can't tell the difference, but because smoking is not something we value or support. Same with guns and gun play. I don't think you have to believe guns will turn your kid into a serial killer to not want that to be part of their play experience. Be
Anonymous wrote:I'm okay with water guns/Nerf guns that don't look anything at all like real guns.
No playing with realistic toy guns, because real guns are not toys.
Not even letting a kid say the word "gun" is pretty extreme.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm not a fan of guns in general and do gun violence prevention work. Initially, I was opposed to having my children play with toy guns, or recreate gun play. I dissuaded it.
In recent years, however, I did hear a child psychologist give a talk about the impact playing "pretend guns". The gist was that children are capable of figuring out what is pretend and what is real. They understand that playing pretend is not violence nor is it trying to really harm someone else. It is imagination at work and they are capable of distinguishing reality from their imaginary play. In all, pretend play outdoors with friends was totally fine and not likely to increase any violent or aggressive tendencies.
She did distinguish the pretend/imaginary play from video games and visual simulation through screen, which studies have shown to blur the lines between the imaginary and reality.
Not sure if that helps you any but I stopped worrying about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Janet Lansbury wrote a piece about this... the message was that it’s a normal and ordinary part of development. Just go with it and don’t project too much.
We have “nerf blasters” and “water blasters” at our house, the rule is that you never aim at people.
Yeah. We just correct our kids when they say gun in pretend play we say “guns aren’t toys. Do you mean blasters?”
Real guns aren’t toys. Toy guns are absolutely toys.