thought I'd post it here; see what you folks think of it:
"I thought it was time to tackle a generations-old belief; one that’s just flat-out accepted, though, as I see it…pretty faulty in premise. What argument, you ask, would that be?
Simply, the whole argument about “outgrowing your toys”.
Supposedly, the idea is that it’s a “rite of passage”, to leave your toys behind, as you venture into High School, College, and beyond . That’s how I’ve heard people describe the situation, anyway.
Unfortunately, every time I hear peoples’ reasoning for it, well…let’s just say that 3 AM weight-loss infomercial sounds more convincing to me.
See, I always used to wonder how it was that kids so easily lost interest in action figures (or as many insist on referring to it "outgrowing them"). I mean, I understand losing interest in something, but on such a grand scale? I kept thinking "how can peer pressure be that powerful?" Granted, many people tell me I have a certain inner-strength to stand up for what I love and believe in that's pretty much unmatched, but that's beside the point.
Truthfully, I don't think most kids were ever that into their toys, to begin with. Now, hold on for a second here; I didn't say they didn't like them at all-- I just said they were never as into them as… say… I was.
A few examples I can cite, from memory:
Back many years ago, when I was around the age of 8, I went to my friend's house after school, and was blown away by all his cool action figures...half of which I wanted, but never had. He just sat on his bed, reading something...didn't even seem to care that he had them.
For another example, my cousins got a lot of the same stuff for the holidays that I got. And while mine was proudly displayed on my shelves and taken with me when I turned on the cartoons as a kid, theirs were instead thrown in some room in the basement, downstairs, while they spent their time playing basketball, and every other known sport on this planet with their friends. Their lives were sports.
My business partner even mentioned that his cousins were much the same: they had more toys than he did, and they just didn't seem that interested in them. They had 'em, but they were just... there.
Final example- many years ago I accompanied my parents to some get-together, being held at the home of some folks we knew from a community center which we were a part of. While the adults were upstairs, the kids went downstairs to the playroom. The kid had loads of cool toys; we were all blown away by them. So…what was his response to all of it, you ask? "YOU CAN'T PLAY WITH ANYTHING! WE'RE GONNA WATCH A MOVIE! A MOVIE I WANT TO WATCH!! !! !! !! !" And you could tell, he had everything… and really cared for none of it.
I’ve even brought my case to several forums I regularly visit. I’ve heard most of the same arguments as were already mentioned, but I also heard some other ones…
One person on a forum—in fact, I believe it was the moderator—told me he was at a store one time, looking to buy some action figures, and some little kid gave him an attitude for wanting to be an adult buying an action figure. The moderator considered himself “rightly chastised over it”, to which I responded with “why do you consider yourself having been "rightly chastised?" Because society deems it so?”
Back many years ago, I used to work at movie store in a mall in New Jersey. Naturally, I brought my argument with me there, as well. I would gladly even debate my own bosses on it, and one of them even offered me a perspective that was more poorly thought out than anything else I’d heard yet: "well, when I was a teenager, my love of toys was pushed aside for a new interest- girls".
So…according to that argument, it’s not possible to enjoy more than one thing at a time. I seem to notice many people do… like cars and sports. So, you can have room in your life for cars and sports, if you like girls- but somehow toys are automatically pushed aside? There's just so much in the argument that really doesn't hold water, in my opinion. It just sounds like poorly thought out beliefs, mixed premises, peer pressure, & more.
Folks, you don't "outgrow" toys, because you can't outgrow anything…except old clothes. Your interests may change, and you might lose interest in things here and there. To lose interest on such a massive scale, however, I'm not buying it.
And it’s worth noting, toys or not, plenty of people do still have the interests they had as children. One of my former high school classmates has been into dancing since the age of 10. Oh, but she never "outgrew" that… she's still big into that. In fact, she was more into that than almost anything else. My guess is her She-Ra and My Little Pony never really excited her the way that her dancing did."