I never thought to buy my kids toy guns. I bought them lots of Lego, and a lot of those tiny Lego people were holding tiny guns, but that was about it.
Then, for my son’s last birthday, one of his friends bought him a toy gun set. I was surprised by how much he loved it. Foam bullets started whizzing through the house.
But the recent gun protests in the US made me stop and think. There were kids, some of them traumatised, getting up to speak, or standing out in the cold holding signs, trying to change laws, because they genuinely feared other kids firing at them with real guns.
Should we really be giving our kids toy guns to play with? Is it a bit wrong? Or is it all just harmless fun?
Principal child psychologist Dr Kimberley O’Brien from the Quirky Kid Clinic has never bought toy weapons for her kids.
In fact, she doesn’t want her kids playing with them at all.
“I cringe if they get given a weapon as a present because I think, ‘I’m going to have to get rid of that, subtly,’” she tells Mamamia.
Top Comments
My brothers (growing up on a farm) were given slug guns before their 12th birthdays. As adults, one brother lost interest in them, whilst the other became a Field and Game member. Neither turned into mass killers.
Oh please! I have avoided getting my kids guns but we have in and got them water pistols. They probably spend more time squirting them at the fence making pictures than at each other my son got a nerf gun for his birthday from a friend do we just talked about how to use it safely. We set up some cups and his sister and him knock them down. To stop a kid playing with his friend because They might be playing with toy guns is ridiculous. We are not the US and we do not have their fixation and culture around guns so i think its unfair to compare aussie kids with Americans.