Jun 092008
 

My tod­dler daugh­ter loves trucks; she’ll glee­fully point them out on the street and in books until you’re sick of the word. So just before her birth­day, there was me in the toy store look­ing at truck-related toys for her (trucks, trains, cars, oth­er assor­ted toy vehicles) try­ing to pick out some­thing that did­n’t entirely duplic­ate what she already has. Behind me, I heard a cus­tom­er ask the clerk for help. The con­ver­sa­tion ran along these lines:

Cus­tom­er: Hi, I’m look­ing for a toy for a two-year-old.
Clerk: boy or girl? Not that it should mat­ter, of course.
Cus­tom­er: it’s a girl.

At which the cus­tom­er was taken over to some oth­er aisle, far away from the trucks and trains and related toys, des­pite the claim that “it should­n’t mat­ter”. I was in the toy store for a while, and she nev­er did make it over to what I guess was con­sidered the “boy” side of the store. My daugh­ter loved the trucks we got her, and likes hav­ing the truck book that her grand­moth­er gave her for her birth­day read to her (to cries of “truck! truck!”). I just hope she does­n’t notice that every driver of every truck in the book is a man. 

  10 Responses to “Girls and Trucks”

  1. I’ve tried to encour­age an interest in “boy things” in my girls as well. I was delighted over the week­end when my young­est chose bed­ding with cars on it rather than hearts or flowers. But the eld­est went for the purple sparkly but­ter­fly. My young­est chooses Thomas the Tank Engine magazines every time. The eld­est wants Bar­bie or Dis­ney Princesses.

    I’m afraid I think it’s an age thing rather than a per­son­al­ity thing. The eld­est did­n’t care about wheth­er some­thing was a boy thing or a girl thing up until around age three, then sud­denly it’s all uni­corns and prin­cesses and fair­ies and but­ter­flies and pink, pink, PINK!

  2. I have a daugh­ter, now six­teen, and have also watched friends daugh­ters grow up. Some were “girly” from the start and stayed that way, one of them now has a hip street fashion/soft punk look — very cool, my daugh­ter likes dresses, fair­ies, pink and dances bal­let and has a wicked intellect.

    All these young women are “fem­in­ists” — don’t you dare tell them they can­’t do some­thing because they’re a “girl”, ‘cus’, verbally they’ll go up one side of you and down the other.

    The big import­ant stuff is in how you present the world to them — the rest of it is innate.

    P.S. Some­where deep down inside the gen­ome I’m sure there’s a nuc­le­otide for why boys make guns out of their Lego and morn­ing toast.

  3. I’ll admit I did­n’t let my son get a bright pink Bar­bie hat when he was three and wanted one. Pink, yes. Bar­bie? Not so much, wheth­er for a son or a daughter.

  4. My daugh­ter went through a race car phase. And by race car, I mean drag­sters and funny cars. Noth­ing thrill­er her more than a day at the drag races. 

    Now, she’s such a girl — dolls, ponies, but­ter­flies. Oh, and knights. She’s a knight. 

    I pre­ferred the drag racing days, but she’s a cute knight.

  5. My daugh­ter (just turned 3) loves trucks. and prin­cesses. and pink pink pink. And all her favor­ite books have boy her­oes. sigh. And she tells me she’s a boy.

  6. I’d be quite happy for our two girls (8 and 10) to play with whatever they want, but they have largely hewed to typ­ic­al girlie stuff. How­ever, the young­er one is crazy for pink, while her older sis­ter hates it. I’ve come to think that, while there are gen­er­al aver­ages, some of which are cul­tur­ally imposed, indi­vidu­al kids gen­er­ally like what they like and hate what they hate, and there’s not much you can do about it.

  7. I’m happy for the kids to make their own choices, I’d just rather that the choices wer­en’t pre-determ­ined for them. I’m glad to see that more pack­aging shows pic­ture of boys and girls enjoy­ing whichever toy is inside these days, that’s an improve­ment, but there is fur­ther to go. As an example, little boys seem to like play­ing with toy kit­chens just as much as little girls do, so there’s no point in mak­ing the pic­tures on the box uni­sex. And doll strollers should come in dif­fer­ent col­ours as well: I know little boys who fight with their sis­ters over who gets to push one even if it is pink.

  8. We’ve tried to raise my sev­en-year-old boy the same way. There’s no dis­cour­age­ment from things that are “pink” or toys typ­ic­ally con­sidered “girl toys”. I think he’ll get enough of that pres­sure from the out­side world, and at least I can say we haven’t enforced those ste­reo­types at home. Oddly enough, I think that’s already star­ted to hap­pen now that he’s been in school for a couple years…he routinely tells me he wants some­thing really “girly” and looks at me for a response, as if it’s sup­posed to be shocking.

  9. I have all boys, and they’re def­in­itely into the ‘truck’ cat­egory of things. How­ever, one of my sons loves and cares for a stuffed toy (‘stuf­fies’ is the term for such things in these parts) with every nur­tur­ing instinct that exists in the human gen­ome. Any­way, on a whim one even­ing the boys and I made a book — a mul­ti­me­dia ‘inter­net book’ — with said stuffy as prot­ag­on­ist. What a cre­ativ­ity-fill, fath­er-sons bond­ing exper­i­ence that night.

    Ducky Finds His Quack: http://wittman.org/story/dfhq/

    I guess I’m telling this story as a blog post com­ment here to say _embracing it_, mak­ing some­thing your own, trans­form­ing it into some­thing new can make dis­trac­tions like gender-bias quandar­ies fade into the distance.

    Thanks for the serendip­it­ous dis­cus­sion (for the curi­ous, I got here by these hops: pod­cast > twit­ter > summize.com > wikipedia)

  10. Hi well from my exper­i­ence ever since I was small I always liked boy things much more than girl stuff, you know. I mean its bet­ter and more fun, like bar­bies oh god no.… Trucks, yes plz!! lol 😀 well I’m 16, I was tom­boy­ish when I was young­er but not so much any­more.… I’m gonna get a job before my 17 birthday(which is in nov. 11 BTW) my mom and dad said they’ll help me buy a truck *since I will be going to col­lege a few months after my b‑day* I’m gonna get a Ford F‑Series xDD and lift it up too lol… Every­one in my fam­ily likes big pick up trucks so I guess thats why I like em’ as well.…. Well the point is that your daugh­ter should­n’t stop lik­ing some­thing just because its more for “males” or whatever. She likes what she likes and it does­n’t mat­ter what oth­er say… even if she does notice that its mostly guys driv­ing them… theres still girls driv­ing them 😀

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