MAKE WAY FOR OTHER TOYS
What
do I know about toys? I haven’t thought
about toys in years. But, there was a
time they were a big deal to me. What’s
that line from Puff the Magic Dragon,
Dragons
live forever not so little boys,
Pirate
ships and dragon’s tails make way for other toys.
Growing up is a series of giving up the toys of
one age for the toys of the next age.
The
first toys I can remember playing with, when I was about 3, were stuffed
animals, Matchbox cars, and wooden blocks.
This was after I had already given up the toddler’s toys I don’t even
remember. I loved to build things with
blocks. I built roads, and entire
cities, and I’d push my Match Box cars around my building-block roads,
imagining what the drivers were doing. The urban planning might have been
simple but there was a complex story behind it.
Some
psychologists believe that boys build towers and girls build forts and other
enclosures. If that’s true, it took me
a while to grow into my masculinity.
After a prolonged road period I started erecting towers, once I started,
I just wanted more blocks so I could build bigger towers.
In
elementary school, bats and balls became toys of mine; I learned to play
football and baseball. But, playing sports and playing with toys are two different things. Sports doesn’t involve pretending, which was
the only kind of playing I knew as a preschooler. In elementary school, sports and make-believe toys had a peaceful
coexistence. I played with Lego blocks, toy guns, learned to ride a bike and
how to swim. Even swimming was a
make-believe game. I pretended I was a
diver searching for sunken treasure.
When I was 7 or 8 years old I built model ships. A few years later I blew them up with
firecrackers. This was about when I
gave up the stuffed animals. I also
drew maps of imaginary places, with imaginary stories behind them. This might sound strange, but there are a
lot of kids who draw maps. Its just
another way to pretend.
By
the time junior high came around, sports edged out make-believe. I stuck with the Legos ‘till eighth grade,
and I still drew maps, but, by that time playing mostly meant playing sports. I
preferred backyard disorganized sports to the organized kind, because they were
less pressure filled and competitive. But
I played organized sports anyway, just ‘cause that was what you did. I still swam, but that had become a sport
too. No more deep sea diver, my friends
and I played a vicious brand of tennis-ball tag.
By
the time I started high school It was clear I was no jock, and I lost interest
in most participation sports. I skied,
played board games, cards, euchre, dungeons and dragons, and video games. My life changed in my sophomore year, when
the car and the guitar became my toys.
We got a band together. We drove
a half an hour to the nearest big city: South Bend, Indiana. Remember when going out for a movie and a
pizza or just driving around, was just so
cool? It seems so childish now, but
compared to what we had been doing up to this point it was just so adult. Only a few years earlier getting together
with friends meant playing. Now getting
together with friends meant going out for dinner and sitting and talking. For me there was still one imaginary toy,
maps. I drew them throughout high
school, whenever class got boring I’d whip out my pencil and draw a world. I finally stopped in college when I had to
take notes in pen.
In
college, the car became less of a toy and more of a tool. Still the guitar, video games (more than
ever), board games, and now beer. I
suppose drugs and alcohol are the toys of choice for big kids; a poor
substitute for all the imagination we used to play with. This brings me back to “Puff the Magic
Dragon” which is about a boy outgrowing his toys. Although Peter Paul and Mary deny it, on another level it’s about
a marijuana smoker going on to harder drugs [puff the magic drag, on
Jackie’s Papers], but in one way those are the same thing.
Now
I’m Thirty-one. I still play the
guitar, drive a car, ride a bike, daydream, and I still drink, but not like I
did in college. Not long ago I was
visiting my five-year-old nephew and he wanted me to play with him. I showed him how to build a road for
Matchbox cars out of wooden blocks, and that was fun. When the road was built, I thought we were done, but he wanted to
play with it. He told me to, “Take this car and pretend
you’re going to work.” But, I couldn’t do it. I was bored. I could still build, but I couldn’t play. I tried to draw a map - couldn’t do it. Right now, I could build a tower or a model,
and I could play football or baseball, but somewhere along there I lost my
ability to pretend.
I
forgot how to play with toys.