Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your son probably knew what the Nerf gone was because he probably has seen them or used them at other kids houses during play dates. You remind me of my next door neighbor who won't let her 7 year old boy play with any guns - not lego guns, playmobil police guns, nerf guns, etc. He comes over to our house where we wage epic Nerf gun battles and everyone has a blast. The neighbor tried to tell me that I couldn't have nerf guns out when her son came over because he would be tempted to use one. I laughed and said my two boys and one girl all play with Nerf guns and they are all over our house. I don't hide toys when other kids come over. If you don't want your son to see or use Nerf guns then it would be best if he didn't come over. She said she wouldn't allow him to come and she didn't for two months. I heard him crying and yelling at his mom for those two months because all the neighborhood kids where running in and out of our house playing with the Nerf guns while he was at his house. Finally, his dad came over and said he was allowed to play at our house and could play with Nerf guns. He is still a sweet, caring kid and hasn't been corrupted because he plays with Nerf guns.
I have no problem with Nerf guns and we have a lot here. But I feel like you were disrespectful of this mother's wishes and actually tried to rub it in their face. You sound gleeful that the little boy was sad and alone and that the family finally admitted they had changed their mind. Yuck.
The mother was wrong and it was flung in her face. I don't see a problem with that. Those type of parents deserve ridicule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OFFS
My 3 year old uses sticks as guns at the park. It's ingrained male behavior.
How? I'm not saying I don't agree, Imy genuinely curious. guns make me very uncomfortable, we aren't hunters and no one my kid is around has one for work or hunting so he has no idea what a gun is right now I don't think. 2 yrs 8 months. but I've been told they just figure it out. but seriously, how? just from kids at daycare who are familiar, etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be furious at the parent who thought this was an acceptable gift.
Me too
you two must live a pretty charmed life then. i don't buy toy guns for my kids either, but I wouldn't be annoyed at all if they received them as gifts. not everyone has the same rules as we do, and I don't expect every parent in my kids' class to know exactly what I would or wouldn't buy for my kids. this is not a real problem. if you don't like it then have some backbone and tell your child that in our family we don't play with those kinds of toys and then trash it. or just let him/her play with it for a couple weeks and then they'll forget about it.
The parent buying a toy gun for a birthday must first think that not everyone has the same taste. When in doubt, the parent is welcome to ask what the birthday boy/girl is into nowadays.
This assumes a parent would know that the birthday boy's parents would be anti-Nerf gun. That would never have occurred to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your son probably knew what the Nerf gone was because he probably has seen them or used them at other kids houses during play dates. You remind me of my next door neighbor who won't let her 7 year old boy play with any guns - not lego guns, playmobil police guns, nerf guns, etc. He comes over to our house where we wage epic Nerf gun battles and everyone has a blast. The neighbor tried to tell me that I couldn't have nerf guns out when her son came over because he would be tempted to use one. I laughed and said my two boys and one girl all play with Nerf guns and they are all over our house. I don't hide toys when other kids come over. If you don't want your son to see or use Nerf guns then it would be best if he didn't come over. She said she wouldn't allow him to come and she didn't for two months. I heard him crying and yelling at his mom for those two months because all the neighborhood kids where running in and out of our house playing with the Nerf guns while he was at his house. Finally, his dad came over and said he was allowed to play at our house and could play with Nerf guns. He is still a sweet, caring kid and hasn't been corrupted because he plays with Nerf guns.
I have no problem with Nerf guns and we have a lot here. But I feel like you were disrespectful of this mother's wishes and actually tried to rub it in their face. You sound gleeful that the little boy was sad and alone and that the family finally admitted they had changed their mind. Yuck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fyi- my mother wouldn't let my brother play with any toy guns. She would take away all of the little guns that came with action figures, she was that neurotic. He ended up becoming an artist and moving to Brooklyn.
I, her daughter, however, married someone who works for the NRA.
We enjoy any and all Nerf guns in our house but I would be deeply ashamed of any association with the NRA, especially to make money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fyi- my mother wouldn't let my brother play with any toy guns. She would take away all of the little guns that came with action figures, she was that neurotic. He ended up becoming an artist and moving to Brooklyn.
I, her daughter, however, married someone who works for the NRA.
We enjoy any and all Nerf guns in our house but I would be deeply ashamed of any association with the NRA, especially to make money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your son probably knew what the Nerf gone was because he probably has seen them or used them at other kids houses during play dates. You remind me of my next door neighbor who won't let her 7 year old boy play with any guns - not lego guns, playmobil police guns, nerf guns, etc. He comes over to our house where we wage epic Nerf gun battles and everyone has a blast. The neighbor tried to tell me that I couldn't have nerf guns out when her son came over because he would be tempted to use one. I laughed and said my two boys and one girl all play with Nerf guns and they are all over our house. I don't hide toys when other kids come over. If you don't want your son to see or use Nerf guns then it would be best if he didn't come over. She said she wouldn't allow him to come and she didn't for two months. I heard him crying and yelling at his mom for those two months because all the neighborhood kids where running in and out of our house playing with the Nerf guns while he was at his house. Finally, his dad came over and said he was allowed to play at our house and could play with Nerf guns. He is still a sweet, caring kid and hasn't been corrupted because he plays with Nerf guns.
I have no problem with Nerf guns and we have a lot here. But I feel like you were disrespectful of this mother's wishes and actually tried to rub it in their face. You sound gleeful that the little boy was sad and alone and that the family finally admitted they had changed their mind. Yuck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be furious at the parent who thought this was an acceptable gift.
Me too
you two must live a pretty charmed life then. i don't buy toy guns for my kids either, but I wouldn't be annoyed at all if they received them as gifts. not everyone has the same rules as we do, and I don't expect every parent in my kids' class to know exactly what I would or wouldn't buy for my kids. this is not a real problem. if you don't like it then have some backbone and tell your child that in our family we don't play with those kinds of toys and then trash it. or just let him/her play with it for a couple weeks and then they'll forget about it.
The parent buying a toy gun for a birthday must first think that not everyone has the same taste. When in doubt, the parent is welcome to ask what the birthday boy/girl is into nowadays.
Uh, it is not about YOUR choice, it is about what you kids likes.
Read up on morality and gun play.
By "banning" toy guns you are fostering an environment of deceit and dishonesty. I bet your children hide their imagination from you and feel bad for having a perfectly normal and active imagination.
We don't need a toy gun to have an active imagination and have fun. Good luck in your life full of poor judgement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not ask a parent if they are ok with it rather than getting it and causing an issue? I would not allow them in my home and if I find out my kid is playing with them in your home, they will not be going back. Its not ok given the world we live in.
In all seriousness, where do you live? We live inside the beltway in Bethesda and all the boys have nerf guns. I seriously don't know one family that bans them. I'm curious where all these families live that say no to Nerf guns.
I'm probably your neighbor (also Bethesda inside the beltway) and we don't allow them. We have enough trouble with him whapping his sisters with other weaponry (eg the light saber that is almost always in quarantine). I don't mind if he plays with them at other peoples houses. I think it's a weird gift, given people's varying views on it--like giving a kid a pg-13 movie or something. I'm not judging people that let their kids watch pg-13 movies, but I see it as a family choice that reasonable people can differ on.
Anonymous wrote:Your son probably knew what the Nerf gone was because he probably has seen them or used them at other kids houses during play dates. You remind me of my next door neighbor who won't let her 7 year old boy play with any guns - not lego guns, playmobil police guns, nerf guns, etc. He comes over to our house where we wage epic Nerf gun battles and everyone has a blast. The neighbor tried to tell me that I couldn't have nerf guns out when her son came over because he would be tempted to use one. I laughed and said my two boys and one girl all play with Nerf guns and they are all over our house. I don't hide toys when other kids come over. If you don't want your son to see or use Nerf guns then it would be best if he didn't come over. She said she wouldn't allow him to come and she didn't for two months. I heard him crying and yelling at his mom for those two months because all the neighborhood kids where running in and out of our house playing with the Nerf guns while he was at his house. Finally, his dad came over and said he was allowed to play at our house and could play with Nerf guns. He is still a sweet, caring kid and hasn't been corrupted because he plays with Nerf guns.
Anonymous wrote:Fyi- my mother wouldn't let my brother play with any toy guns. She would take away all of the little guns that came with action figures, she was that neurotic. He ended up becoming an artist and moving to Brooklyn.
I, her daughter, however, married someone who works for the NRA.