Do you ever get so fed up with all the toys lying around? This is the inside story of my drastic decision to take my kids’ toys away.
As some of you already know, I’ve been on a mission this year to simplify my family’s life and rid ourselves of excess. Over the course of the past nine months I have probably given away about 75 percent of my girls’ toys, keeping only the items that I felt encouraged their imagination and that they actually played with. I thought I was doing pretty good.
Even so, there were warning signs that my kids still had too much stuff. In June, we took a field trip to Reptile World in Orlando. Afterwards we decided it would be fun to take the girls to dinner at a dinosaur-themed restaurant called T-Rex in Downtown Disney. While we were waiting to be seated my oldest daughter Maggie spotted the Build-a-Dino Workshop in the gift shop and although we immediately said “no way,” from that moment on she could think of nothing else.
All through our delicious dinner, surrounded by dramatic (fake) meteor showers and animatronic dinosaurs, she fixated on the one thing she couldn’t have rather than the cool sights we were actually experiencing.
On the three hour drive home, Husband and I–seriously concerned by our daughter’s inability to enjoy the moment–made a point to talk about all the neat stuff we had seen, what our favorite reptiles were, and how funny Trouble had been holding the snake. By the time we made it home the Build-a-Dino had been forgotten. At least by her. But we were worried.
The Breaking Point
In the weeks that followed, Chuck and I talked a lot about how we were going to handle this lack of contentment we were noticing. Then one morning near the end of July, after telling my kids to clean their room for the umpteenth time, I made the somewhat impulsive–albeit pre-warned–decision to take away ALL their stuff.
Just 2 days earlier I had spent half the day cleaning their room & re-organizing their toys and closet, which is something I do fairly regularly. I wasn’t asking them to clean some giant out-of-control mess, just to pick up a few items off the floor and put them away in the very clearly labeled baskets. Every time I came back to check on them, they had not only NOT picked up, they had made an even bigger mess.
Why I Took My Kids’ Toys Away (& Why They Won’t Get Them Back)
I finally gave up and took it all away. I wasn’t angry, just fed up. I calmly began packing up not just a toy or two, but every single thing. All their dress-up clothes, baby dolls, Polly Pockets, & stuffed animals, all their Barbies, building blocks, and toy trains, right down to the the furniture from their dollhouse and play food from their kitchen. I even took the pretty Pottery Barn Kids comforter from their bed. The girls watched me in stunned silence for a few minutes and then, when the shock wore off, they helped. And just like that, their room was clear.
The Paradigm Shift
I had no idea what a dramatic difference this one semi-impulsive decision would make in all our lives. I first started noticing a real change about 4 weeks later when we took a family trip to Key West.
In contrast to our last outing and for the first time ever, neither girl asked us to buy a single thing the entire weekend. Not a toy, not a cheesy souvenir, not a light-up necklace from a passing street vendor. Nothing. We passed hundreds of shops and they loved looking in the window, but they were content just to be. What was most amazing to me was that we didn’t talk to them about it ahead of time. Not once did we have to tell them not to ask, or explain that being together was what mattered.
Had I not experienced it with my own eyes, I would’ve never believed that an addiction to stuff could be broken that quickly. The truth is that when I took all their stuff away, I was terrified at what would happen. I worried that I was scarring them for life, depriving them of some essential developmental need, taking away their ability to self-entertain.
So…what happened??
In reality, the opposite has happened. Instead of being bored, they seem to have no shortage of things to do. Their attention span is much longer and they are able to mindfully focus on their task at hand. They color or read for hours at a time and happily spend the entire afternoon playing hide & seek or pretend.
They are far more content, able to appreciate the blessings that they do have, and able to truly enjoy the moment they are in without always having to move on to the next thing. They are more creative and patient, more willing to share, far more empathetic towards the plight of others, and, with little to fight over, they hardly fight at all.
When I do take down a toy for them to play with (no, I didn’t throw everything away), such as their Lego blocks or dress-up clothes or or their kitchen food & dishes, that one thing will entertain them for the entire day. (The rest has more or less been forgotten and will soon make it’s way from the attic to the Goodwill pile.)
What I love even more is that they are able to recognize excess on their own. Aside from a favorite stuffed animal and the comforter on their bed, (which they both earned back), neither of them actually want their toys back on a permanent basis. They like not being overwhelmed by stuff and not having to spend so much time cleaning their room. In fact, later that very same day, as we drove to gymnastics class, Maggie said it’s okay that we don’t have any more toys Mommy. We can just read and use our imaginations. And now we won’t have to clean up every day. She understood before I did that more stuff doesn’t make us happier.
No turning back
When I first became a mom I was so happy to have a chance to start over, to undo through my children all the wrong that was done to me, to give them everything I felt I had missed out on. I wanted our lives to be perfect, and my vision of perfection included a perfectly decorated bedroom filled with beautiful things, a life where they would want for nothing.
I equated giving them stuff with making them happy, a message that our consumer driven culture hammers into our psyches from the time we our born. Oh, what a lie!
I started this blog because I am a shopaholic, and there are so many times where I buy things when I am bored or unhappy, just to fill the void. My husband laughs at me (and sometimes throws up his hand in frustration) because although I talk a good game about wanting to downsize and get rid of stuff, in reality there are still many times where I just can’t help myself from buying more.
I justify it, telling myself it was on sale or a really good deal, or something we really needed, or that I deserve it because I work so hard. In reality it is just another thing I am trying to buy to solve a problem that runs much deeper.
Stuff isn’t evil in and of itself, but in a world where we are constantly told that what we have isn’t quite good enough, the love of things can so very easily consume us. It is the pursuit of it all–more toys, cuter clothes, a prettier house, a nicer car, a bigger computer, a fancier phone–that makes us forget all the things that actually matter.
It wasn’t until after observing first hand the real and immediate changes in my children after taking their toys away that I truly began to understand. And now instead of me teaching them, they have taught me the lesson I wish I would’ve have learned a long time ago.
For our family, there’s no turning back.
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Did you really name your kid “Princess”?
No, it’s just a pet name. 🙂 Can’t be too careful on the internet!
omgosh….Reading this post for the first time and I LOVE it. As I was reading your words, I felt like I could write this! Good for you and I can relate completely on many levels! Thank you for this! I needed to hear it! I once took ALL my sons toys out of his room to bins in the basement and he only wanted a few back (which he earned). There are still 2 bins full of toys from a month ago that he’s never even ask back for!. Again, thank you! My kids are 2 1/2yrs (girl) and 5(boy)
Oh, how I’ve fantasized about doing the same thing. I usually use the threat, “You have thirty minutes to pick up whatever you see on the floor and put it where it belongs, and if I come back and see no change to this room, I’m coming back with a plastic bag and grabbing everything I see on the floor and donating it.” That usually gets tears from one or both of them–along with protestations of “But that’s not enough time!” or “But we don’t know where to put everything!” That second comment, to me, means they have more stuff than their room can hold. They have shelves and drawers for their toys (Barbies, baby dolls, doll clothes, Barbie doll clothes, ponies, etc.) and for their yarn and art/craft supplies, but their room is overflowing, and the only way I see out of that is a serious purge.
The downstairs playroom is also a disaster. I’m hitting that room first. Dominic plays with one toy for all of five minutes before he moves to something else, and everything gets left on the floor. Not worth it. NOBODY likes to spend time in that room, right now, so the room is basically unused for most of the day.
Thank you for the inspiration! 🙂
Your blog seriously offends me to the point of rage! I can imagine my stepmom doing that manipulation to her children. You almost remind me of that “Mommie Dearest” Joan Crawford with what feels like absolute control over your children’s toys. (Joan Crawford, from what I remember in the movie let her adopted daughter Christina keep only one out of ten toys gifts she received, and made her give the rest to charity, probably for tax exemptions or something). Would you like it if your parents did that to you? How about somebody step in & take away every material thing of YOURS? Contradict me all you want on this! I won’t be changing my mind!
My parents always counseled me at the toy store about what they would buy me and then I had money to buy my own stuff. We were never denied things like in Mommy Dearest. The things they bought us weren’t always traditional “everybody’s-got-one-so-I-need-one-too” items. Sometimes it was spurred on by a genuine interest in a subject. Thus, one–very appreciated–gift my parents gave me was a medical encyclopedia (because I keep reading the old ones on the shelf), craft books, a chemistry set, and charcoal pencils. And Dad was good for a fruitful trip to the library regularly.
My mom is the queen of redirection. One time I was down at the gas fireplace and was charring burnt matches, finding I could write on the tiles with the charred wood. I got a big-time scolding by Mom for that. (You’ll get burned, get away from that, don’t play with it, etc.) Then the next day she came home with a charcoal pencil set plus a big notebook of art paper. It surprised me, to say the least! But it also told me that Mom wanted to promote my creativity, not hold things away from me.
And when it was Back-to-School shopping time, we allowed ourselves to buy a number of nifty creative things for home (no, we couldn’t bring them to school, more’s the pity).
Mom never bought dolls for us (that’s a whole different subject) but she did not object to us buying stuff with our own allowances. And, yeah, there were things we had to earn back. There were also things that were threatened to be put on my Gram’s bonfire! That made us pick up whatever it was fairly quickly!
I have on occasion usually as a punishment removed all of my sons ( he’s three) toys and he has too earn them back ( usually after he has trashed his room and i do mean trashed). he has never asked for one of them. last week i removed 2/3 of his clothes as these get strewn around his room when he is not happy and tidied into the dirty washing basket instead of put away. so everything size 4 and over was packed away til he out wears or out grows what he has. however this post which i found today has inspired me to pack up all his toys this week. sort thru them and discard what he doesn’t love. most of it he wont miss but if given the option gets quite upset about giving some of his toys away.