“I was a bit smug. My child isn’t drawn to mindless violence. My child is drawn to baking. But when my second son was born, he pretty much emerged from my vagina brandishing firearms…”
The image was shocking. A small boy walking with his family in Martin Place, right in front of the Lindt Cafe, carrying a toy replica of an automatic weapon.
“Oh my God,” I thought, horrified. “What kind of parent would DO that?”
And then I thought some more and realised that kind of parent was me.
“No child of mine will have a toy gun”, I declared 17 years ago. And I meant it, dammit.
I was a brand new parent and I was blissfully deluded about so many things. The idea I would be able to control what my child was into was just one of them. I’m the parent right? My values. My rules.
My first child was a boy and he had no guns. I wouldn’t allow it. This wasn’t a huge problem because he was a kid who was obsessed with cars and cooking. While other 4 year-old boys carried around guns, he carried around a copy of Nigella Lawson’s How To Be A Domestic Goddess, weighed down with post-it notes marking all the cakes he wanted to make (and eat).
I felt a bit smug about this. No weapons in MY HOUSE. War and violence are discouraged. I had a friend with a son the same age who tried a similar approach before waving the white flag. “I don’t let him have guns and so he just chews his toast into a gun shape and shoots his sister” she sighed. I made sympathetic noises while feeling morally superior. My child isn’t drawn to mindless violence. My child is drawn to baking.
Top Comments
WTF?? This child's toy was just that, a TOY! And it was held together with sticky tape! I am afraid that Airport security can be really over the top. I once "dared" to go through security with a harmless nail clipper in my possession, I was informed it was a "deadly weapon" & if I wanted to keep it I should go to the newstand nearby where for $2:00 (I think) they would look after it for me! I was only seeing someone off at the time, & as the nail clipper was an old one I decided to just throw it away! What a lot of these so-called "security" guards do not seem to realise is that on many aircraft, meals are served with "real" cutlery, surely they are much more of a threat than my nail clipper? Also, whilst that "offending" item was not permitted,I could go through with my car keys, the one for the ignition was a long key, & in the hands of a "bad guy" would make a "lovely" weapon, especially if held between the fingers & brandished!
I live on a farm where we have real guns for work purposes, always used responsibly (we don't go drinking and shooting with friends or hunting etc) and stored responsibly... But we do have guns around, and ammo, and I absolutely hate it when children point toy guns at people and pretend shoot them.
I have young relatives who are typical bush boys who make guns and weapons out of everything, and I KNOW I'm not supposed to judge parents or tell them what to do etc, but I truly wish their parents would teach them not to point the guns deliberately at people, walk up to them and go "bang bang you're dead" (or similar)... It's a little different if it's pointing a toy at each other in the middle of a game of cops and robbers, when just running around and pointing it at people to deliberately pretend kill them, I want to physically shake some sense into their parents!
There are real guns in my house! There are times when things occur on the farm when you have the get the gun out and there are children (relatives, visitors etc) near by and they will see the gun in use. As far as I'm concerned you can play with guns but you do not, ever, walk up to someone and point one at them - even if it's a toy, I don't care. You don't point guns at people.
I hope to God this a rule I can uphold with my own children (feel free to laugh at me later)...