A fed up mom set limits and cleaned out her kids room. One year later, the girls have seen some major changes. A must read to find out what happened!
A year ago this week I posted this (now infamous) post about taking my kids’ toys away. At the time, I honestly had no idea what a brouhaha it would cause. I was simply sharing our own experience. The comments and reactions to that post have run the gamut, from parents applauding the decision and letting me know that post inspired them to do the same, to a few others who were sure I was causing permanent psychological damage, depriving my children of a happy childhood, and setting them up to be neurotic hoarders who will require years of therapy.
Oh my.
There have been so many comments left on that post that there is just no way to respond to them all. I thought instead I could address some of the questions that have come up most often:
To be honest, for the first week it all sat in huge pile in the hallway outside their room because I didn’t know what to do with it. Eventually I was able to sort through it, but very little actually got thrown in the garbage. More than half was sent to Goodwill, while almost everything else went up into the attic. The few remaining items went on the high shelves in their bedroom closet.
In that moment, I just wanted to completely clear their room of everything. We live in Florida where our A/C is usually set to 79 degrees all the time, so it wasn’t a matter of taking a basic need away–we can barely even get them to stay under the sheet, much less a heavy comforter. I guess to me it was just a symbol of all the excess in their lives.
Honestly, no. Of all the things I worry about for my kids, scarring them by limiting the number of toys they have is not even on the radar screen. In fact, I worry about the opposite, the psychological damage caused by a society that is constantly telling us we need more stuff to be happy. My girls are in no way deprived, and they still have plenty of things to do and play with. In fact, by most of the world’s standards, with enough to eat, a comfortable home, and access to school, sports, medicine, and art, they are still extremely privileged. My goal is for them to grow up with an attitude of gratitude for all that they have, not to complain about the stuff they missed out on.
Well…..My husband would probably say yes. I prefer to think of it as decisive. 🙂
My main guideline is that we only keep toys that encourage their imagination or creativity. I hate toys that have a billion pieces, but that seems more or less unavoidable, so instead we rotate toys out on a regular basis. For instance my girls have a box of Littlest Pet Shop figurines that they love, as well as a big bin of Barbie dolls. If the Littlest Pet Shop stuff comes down from the attic, then the Barbie dolls go back up. Right now the only toys they have down are their American Girl dolls, a few doll outfits, and the food & dishes for their play kitchen.
My oldest daughter is super sentimental about everything so we often end up putting things in “keepsake” boxes up in the attic rather than giving them away. However, as she has gotten used to the idea of less she is more open to the idea of giving stuff away. One thing that helped a lot was donating many of their toys to our church nursery. That way they still have a chance to go and play with them every once in a while.
It is definitely not good for kids to have their parents at odds over parenting decisions, and I think ultimately this will only work if parents are willing to stand together. If one spouse is reluctant to make such a drastic move, perhaps instead agree to a trial run before actually getting rid of everything. Fill up some big boxes or garbage bags with all the toys, then put them away in the garage or attic or basement–any place that is completely off limits–for a few weeks. At the end of the trial period you can decide how to proceed together.
I only have my own experience with two kids to go on, but I honestly think that most kids these days are overwhelmed by too much stuff. So….I guess yes, I think it probably would.
Keeping on top of the influx of stuff is a constant battle! I recently had to do another major purge and reorganization because stuff was starting to pile up again. Several items somehow made their way down from the attic at the same time, while birthdays brought some new games and a few treasures and outfits for their dolls. They are also constantly bringing home papers and projects and little trinkets from church and school and birthday parties.
We have found that the only real solution to the continual flow is a commitment to the idea that we will not let ourselves or our kids get buried. We have to be diligent about clearing the clutter on a regular basis and only keeping out a few things at any given time. It is an ongoing process, not a one-time event.
I think really the most important shift we’ve made when it comes to both birthdays and holidays is de-emphasizing the presents in favor of the experience. Our girls love planning their elaborate birthday parties but no longer equate birthday parties with gifts. Changing the attitudes of our friends and family was a little harder at first. However, when they saw we were really serious (writing a very public article helped), they did begin respecting our requests for no gifts. Even their aunt, who was constantly showering them with gifts, has amended her ways and instead asks my husband for ideas on what they need.
This is not to say that we never give our kids any gifts; we do. We just really try to limit the quantity and to give things they need–such as new clothes or shoes or books–along with something they might want. We also prefer paying for experiences, such as a trip to a theme park or to go see the baby alligators hatch at a local zoo, rather than just a meaningless toy.
Seeing the changes in my children was definitely a catalyst for change in myself as well. Over the past year, my husband and I have found a lot more common ground in our quest for a simpler life. We started last fall with a two-month spending freeze that resulted in a lot more financial peace, and over the past year we have also worked really hard at clearing our lives of excess clutter and filling our “time jar” with the things that matter the most.
At the end of the day, intentional parenting is always going to be a lot of really hard work. Unfortunately for all of us, there is no magic solution for raising perfect kids. Teaching my kids all the things they will need to know to be productive and joy-filled adults–how to work hard, use their manners, eat their vegetables, think about others, clean up after themselves, to be content with what they have, to problem solve and use critical thinking skills, and so,so much more–is an ongoing, daily responsibility. One year later, taking my kids’ toys away was an important turning point in our lives, but it was still only one moment in a whole lifetime of parenting moments.
And we’re not done just yet.
I’d love to hear your thoughts on this issue! How did this idea of taking kids’ toys away affect you personally? Did you try it with your own family? What was the result?
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My mom and I both love the technique because it helps you stop yourself and gives you guidelines. We’ll be doing it again this year!
Did you honest to God read the original article? If you really were a "children's mental health" specialist why don't you weigh in on the fact that their daughter had a habit of fixating on what she didn't have instead of the things she DID have. She didn't go home and excavate their room because she wanted something she couldn't have. She told them clean your room or I'm taking all your toys away. When they didn't clean their room she followed through. She also kept the toys they ACTUALLY played with. (Gasp) and got rid of stuff they wouldn't miss.
Also, can you explain what your degree is in that you're qualified to do a full psychological assessment of her girls through ONE blog post?
All in all you sound like all the parents I met growing up whose emotionally brittle children are still living with them age 40. Its psycho-babble.
While we still have entirely too much stuff, we implemented the "4 Things Christmas" last year. The things are "something I want, something I need, something to wear, something to read." It was great, because there was no gift fatigue and the kids actually enjoyed the things they got because they could remember what they got!
Each kid gets 4 things, in our case from parents and both sets of grandparents, so it's still too much stuff (12 things total), but try to tell the grandparents they can only get each grandkid one thing...
My mom and I both love the technique because it helps you stop yourself and gives you guidelines. We'll be doing it again this year!
Thank you so much for your words. Your book and your blog has truly blessed my life and my family. My husband and I listened to your audio book during a family trip and had a really good discussion that will change the way we do things. Thank you for this wonderful material.
-Khalia
Lovely Ruth,
I am late to the party. But nevertheless, I just want to apologise for all the hate and horrible words you have received over this beautiful article. I can tell by the way you have written it and your concern for wanting your kids to have happy fulfilled lives, that you love them so and want only the best for them. I sincerely hope you've managed to shut the negativity out, I feel absolutely disgusted at some of these comments. Sending you love and strength.
Thank you Ruth for writing this! I read the original post and was like YES!!!! I have 7 kids and we have a very small 4 bedroom house. The amount of "stuff" is overwhelming to me. I am a work at home mom. I recently spent a good 3 hours cleaning the room 3 of my daughters share and tonight was so angry by the state of the room again. It's so bad you can't even walk without stepping on things. I have made it known I'll be taking things away. I've tried for years now to organize us... and nothing I do seems to work. I have a rule that if something new comes in, 2 things have to go. My kids are definitely addicted to stuff. And I am so so ready to purge it!
Fantastic read, it really opened my eyes to the situation. My daughter is 3 and asking about sleep overs already. I think we’ll adopt the no sleep over policy! I got into a lot of trouble and inappropriate and dangerous behavior as a teenager at sleep overs. Lots of bullying at sleep overs before I hit teen years. I’ll skip all of the with my little ones and just say no way. Thank you so much!!
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You're still an awful person who should go die.
There is nothing wrong with:
Children having and enjoying toys
Children asking for something and having the occasional meltdown
Patiently & empathetically using a meltdown as an teachable moment
Limiting the amount of stuff in a home
Organizing toys so life is manageable
Being intentional about the toys children own
Rotating toys so they remain interesting
Donating toys children have grown out of
Children occasionally being bored
Kindly requesting relatives set limits on gifts given
Children not appreciating a life moment that you appreciate
The issue I think negative posters have is:
The headline is sensational and does not reflect the larger process
The toy removal is described as a punitive spectacle prompted by a breaking point
The process is placed in a larger social and adult context that young children don’t understand
I understand how, with the way the post is written, some readers may interpret Ruth as a narcissist. I, however, will give her the benefit of the doubt and assume this written portrayal does not reflect a kinder reality of what happened.
Spot on