So at work on Monday I learned from George, one of the managers, we have this bin of toys that we can draw from to bring to tables of kids. Toward the end of my shift I had a table with one boy and one girl, and went back there to pick some stuff out. The thing that drew my eye first was this huge toy car, one of the ones that runs forward if you
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If she wants the car and the boy wants the makeup, I'm sure they'll work out a trade, even at 6 years old. :P
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(Which is not to say I see anything wrong with adults of either sex using makeup. But I think that's quite different from training a six-year-old to think her play time should be used applying makeup, or focused on her appearance, or modifying her body, when in a few years she'll understand the focus of makeup in her adult role and already have these associations with it.)
While it's not up to me to determine what toys she does and does not play with, it is absolutely up to me what roles and culture that *I* choose to perpetuate, and that was my whole issue with essentially waltzing up to the table and sending the message, "Here you go, play with a car and be active! Oh and you, make yourself prettier."
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While that's absolutely true, I'd say that this situation is less about you and more about what a little girl would enjoy. I agree with Dani -- if you have the opportunity to do so, bring them a few toys to pick from.
Beyond that, your pick is a just a best guess even at best of times. I personally don't view make-up as a manifestation of a harmful gender stereotype, so YMM naturally V.
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And I think I'm a pretty good example of how playing with makeup doesn't necessarily mean you will think your play time must be spent applying makeup. I played house when I was little, but I also played Power Rangers and Sonic the Hedgehog and baseball and street hockey.
So I'm still going with my initial strategy, sort of agreeing with Alery above... bring a selection of toys for kids to pick from themselves if you have the time to do so. If a little girl reaches for makeup and her parents don't care, it's not really your place to tell her she CAN'T have it.
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So yeah, echoing the people who say choice is good.
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Unless they want the same toy. :x
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