October 4,
2006
Enjoy
Christmas Toy Quest While You Can
Every year
about this time - as my wife Sally gears up to begin her Christmas
shopping - I get the inexplicable urge to shop the toy stores of
America.
It’s dumb, of course, because all of my kids are too old to want
playthings for Christmas.
“How’d you like a nice toy truck from Santa Claus?” I asked my oldest
son the other day.
“Not much,” said Bob, who’s 42 and living in Pittsburgh.
The other kids - Laurie, Jackie and Christopher - are the same way.
They want
gift certificates, clothes and money - not toys - for Christmas.
But the truth is, I miss being able to shop for trucks, dolls and other
playthings. It’s sad how quickly children grow up.
I mean, it seems like just yesterday my wife Sally and I bought Laurie
one of those little ovens that worked with a light bulb and Jackie a
doll that did everything but run away from home.
And I’ll never forget the year Santa brought Christopher a BB gun
despite numerous admonishments from Sally that he surely would shoot his
eye out.
Oh, time, you robber you, what have you done to my children?
I mean, Christmas isn’t stone-washed blue jeans, CDs or $50 bottles of
perfume.
Christmas is roller skates, teddy bears and little red wagons.
I admit it. I envy the mothers and fathers who are shopping for toys
this Christmas.
Can you keep a secret? Good. Then I’ll admit something else.
I still hang around toy stores, especially at Christmas.
Just the other day we went to the mall and when Sally headed for the
clothing shops, I slipped quietly into the nearest toy emporium. First,
I checked out the electric trains. Then I lingered awhile in the aisle
where games of every description were stacked almost to the ceiling.
I eyeballed the model airplanes, too, and the tea sets and jump ropes
and doll clothes and kites and plastic fire engines. Then, as I was
getting ready to leave, I heard a man and his wife talking.
“I can’t wait until the kids are old enough so we don’t have to go
through this toy-buying every Christmas,” she complained.
“I hear that,” he agreed.
They were wrong, of course.
But I didn’t have the heart to take them aside, say over by the doll
houses, or maybe the electric football games, and tell them to enjoy
their forays into toyland while they could because soon — too soon, in
fact — their kids would be asking for socks, shirts and sweaters instead
of bicycles, coloring books and baseball gloves.
© 2006 North Star Writers
Group. May not be republished without permission.
Click here to talk to our writers and
editors about this column and others in our discussion forum.
To e-mail feedback about this column,
click here. If you enjoy this writer's
work, please contact your local newspapers editors and ask them to carry
it.
This is Column # BB39.
Request permission to publish here.
|