We went shopping for a friend’s child’s birthday yesterday.
A sure sign of turning old if there was any.
Earlier a party meant hanging out with friends dancing the
night away, now a party means the stodgy
office get-togethers mostly farewells or promotions; the only ‘informal’ parties are the birthdays
of your colleagues’ children.
Considering it would be the first of many such birthdays in
years to come, I decided to plunge right in.
What do you get a one
year old, and a four year old?
I tried to revise the
baby milestones while thinking out loud “ Does a one year old understand
colours? Is a squeaky toy too kiddish for a one year old? Have they outgrown
the quacking of the duck, and are they ready for the mechanics of a toy car?
We decided to go for the sensible gifts. The kinds which the
parents appreciate; after all how many of us remember what we got on our first
birthday, or for that matter what we got on the fourth birthday?
Gifts should seemingly be for the children when actually we
mean it for the parents. For example a drinking cup and bib for the infant and
a tiny school bag for the four year old for her baby steps into the wonderful
world of school. Yup that would be fun – not.
We quickly shot down the idea of the non- fun sensible
gifts, once we found out that a ‘unbreakable’ saucer and cup came for over 400
rupees! “how much?” I shrieked. No we don’t want a set of cups , we just want one
cup, I clarified. Evidently a single drinking cup can cost you 400 rupees.
I pretty much decided to make my unborn child drink from a stainless-steel
glass in that moment. Oh and a school bag is upwards of 600 ruppees: it’s for
kinder garten for God’s sake, a tiffin box and maybe colour-pencils is what it
will hold!
Anyways we came to the conclusion that if we were going to
buy ‘expensive’ gifts we might as well have fun buying them. We thought of all
the gifts we really wanted as children, and the ones we never got.
We decided
we wanted to be the cool aunties, the ones who bought nice fun birthday gifts.
We headed for the ‘little
black dress’ of birthday gifts. You see no matter what the occasion and
body type, you can find a LBD for the occasion and still be trendy, similarly
no matter what kind of little girl we are buying for, THE BARBIE DOLL is the
safest bet, thus the little black dress of birthday gifts.
Happy memories of the
barbies I had got over the years rushed back as we shopped for the right
Barbie. The wedding Barbie and birthday Barbie and fashionista Barbie… each one
more gorgeous then the next, but we pretty much stopped after seeing the price.
The simple cute, my first Barbie just didn’t seem to rock it.
At the end of our
Barbie sojourn we came to one resounding conclusion, “ Our parents were right.”
As a kid I remember pining for the Barbie swimming pool and
sauna set, complete with deck chairs and little over head umbrella, plastic
suntan bottles and what have you. I never got it. The kitchen Barbie, with the
plastic microwave oven and tiny plastic pizzas and burgers… nope that was also
greeted with a no. It’s too expensive and you are going to lose the plastic suntan bottle
anyway, where are you going to put it, your room is full of toys, what happened
to the last Barbie you got, you lost it’s shoe the very next day… words
which had seemed so harsh back then ring with truth now. We unanimously came to
the conclusion that we would not buy our
kids the grossly over prized Barbie paraphernalia, they would get bored of
it in a week anyways.
It’s not about the toy I rationalized to myself, it’s the principle of the matter. I am going to
be teaching my child a very important life lesson. You do not always get what you
want, you must value money, even if you think that this is what you really
really want and can’t live without it, over time you will realize that you can.
These are important lessons best learnt in childhood. It’s why I am a
grounded and well balanced person.
This brilliant insight I can claim now. I am in a unique
position where I am no longer a child and do not have children of my own yet. I
still remember my own childhood and all the times I craved a particular toy and
the joy of receiving it, the adult in me is able to remember that the toy
stopped mattering after some time, and the woul- be parent in me has already
started denying my would-be child her would be fantasies. I stand at a
threshold looking at my past and using the knowledge to make my future.
“little girl, if you
want the swimming pool barbie with ken, then it is going from your college
fund, you must realize that everything costs money, and only then you will value it.” I
told my imaginary kid.
That’s when we found the ‘bella ‘doll. It was an imitation
Barbie, and quite cute. It also fit our budget. YES!! We had found a fun toy,
it fit our budget and we were the undisputed queens of shopping for li’l girls.
Oh look, it even has a press here button, let’s see what that does! No sooner
had we pressed the “press here” button than the whole shop resounded in “ Munni
badnam hui darling tere liye” horrified we pressed the button again only to be
greeted by “ My name is sheela, sheela ki jawani I’m too sexy for you..” It was
so ridiculous that I was rolling in the aisle laughing. Thank God we had
noticed the “press here” button, I thought, imagine if this had happened at the
birthday party!
We had another
session of deciding on the “badnam” bella. As my friend rightly said, it was a
pretty doll, and fit our budget , and as far as the raunchy wordings went,
children these days would anyways know them through television. All true, but
by now I was in my make belief world with my unborn little girl, and I would
never ever let her get a jawan badnam doll. It is probably true that in years
the toys will all have “age inappropriate content” but for now I refused to
give in to the marketing gimmick.
That brought us back to the more expensive, but decidedly
more decent Barbies. We settled for a one which had a baby in a pram, it also
came with two adorable looking plastic shoes. I realized that maybe the pink
plastic stiletto would lie under the bed the next day, another of the shoes
would be lost in the caverns of the multiple drawers in the birthday girls
room.
But I was not the mother who would run after the girl asking
her where the lost shoe had gone, neither would I be there when a month later
the doll would lie decapitated in a forgotten corner of the toy cupboard, much
like many of my own Barbies had lain.
I was not the mother
yet,for now, I would be the indulgent aunt who bought cool fun gifts.
This blog is for my
parents who looked on unflinchingly while I discarded many a toy which they had
bought lovingly and from their hard earned money, this is also for all young
parents to have the courage to bring up their children in such trying times, it
is also for every one who has ever shopped for birthday presents for children.
Comments
Gift shopping is an art !!! Enjoy being the cool aunt for soon you will be the responsible mom!!!