Show off your favourite childhood toy (meme)

Did you have Lego Hero Factory when you were a little girl? – JD, 4

We’re having a clear out at the moment and one thing that definitely isn’t going to the skip is my favourite toy from childhood (I’ll tell you about him in a minute).

We all have one, don’t we? A toy that meant and means more to us that all the others.

It’s a meme

  1. Take a snap of your toy (or find an old pic)
  2. Post it on your blog with the story behind it
  3. Add the badge to your post (the code is below – scroll!)
  4. Come back here and add your post to the Linky so we can all have a peek into your childhood!
  5. <div align="center"><a href="http://www.amummytoo.co.uk/2012/04/childhood-toy/"><img src="http://www.amummytoo.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/my-favourite-childhood-toy.png" alt="My favourite childhood toy" title="My favourite childhood toy" width="150" height="150" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-4415" /></a></div>

    And now, meet Stevie…

    This little fellow at the top of the page is Stevie. He is 25 and three quarters.

    I’m not a girly girl, I never was. I spent most of my time either buried in a book or riding my bike. I didn’t own a barbie and I hated pink, but I loved Stevie.

    I got Stevie for my fourth birthday from a toyshop that isn’t there anymore. A toyshop at the back of a shop otherwise filled with boring things like kitchen gadgets and food. At the back, down some stairs was a world full of games – what seemed like acres of shelves, stuffed to bursting point with toys. In reality, it was probably a fraction of the size of the local Toys R Us we have today, but back then it seemed huge.

    I chose Stevie carefully. I didn’t want a cutesy doll with bleach blonde curls that weed on command, I wanted as close to a real baby as possible. And so I chose Stevie and named him after the son of one of my mum’s friends, who I guess I must’ve had a teeny crush on.

    Stevie had his own pushchair and regularly came on outings with us. Of course, I’d soon grow bored and leave my mum carrying the lot, but Stevie had to be shown respect at all times.

    That’s probably why my brothers took such pleasure in ripping off his arms, leg and head and chucking them down the stairs in an avalalanche of plastic limbs, with me tearing after them. It’s comical looking back now but oh, how I wailed at the time!

    Once I started school, I still carried Stevie with me on occasion, but grew less protective of him. I’ll never forget the day I handed him to my mum, who stuffed him into a carrier bag on the back of my brother’s pushchair. I wasn’t bothered, but the woman who came over and hollered at my mum for mistreating a baby clearly was.

    Mum groaned, laughed and I was secretly delighted that my little Stevie could still pass as real, even despite the multiple trips down the stairs in pieces, the smudges of felt tip pen on his face, and the various grazes that come from spending too long in a messy toy box.

    Stevie is the only toy I’ve held on to and kept safe. Through university, through city living, through house moves, through parenthood thus far. He lives in a box most of the time, but he’s special. And yes, I know he’s just a doll!

I spy with my little eye something beginning with T

I think his name is Barnaby Excitement – JD, 4

It’s Wednesday, which means it’s the day we regress to our early years and play a spot of #ISpy. And what better for the job than another of the nifty nicknacks at my mum’s house? So here it is, a little teeny bit of my childhood. Say what you see…

Mum of One

My three books – what are yours?

If you only ever read one book in your life…I highly recommend you keep your mouth shut – Simon Munnery

Do you remember the enthusiasm you had for books as a child? I do. Starting my new book as soon as it came out of the bag, reading all night, totally engrossed to the end, and then wishing I’d made it last longer. Right through school, books were my very favourite things.

At uni I studied English Literature and my main ‘responsibility’ was to digest three books a week. Proper books. Books by classic authors and literary geniuses. Joy!

Then real life started. Proper jobs. Then children. Proper responsibilities. Over the next ten years, spare time became a thing of the past. Or rather, decent blocks of spare time became a thing of the past. Now my book reading time barely spans ten minutes on a good day.

And so the internet, seductress of the time-poor has reeled me in, giving me the comparatively quick hit of blog posts, short stories and *hangs head* YouTube. My soft-back novels (several thousand of them) gather dust. My Kindle lies neglected. I need to read more books. I really do.

To give me the kick I need, to reignite my passion for books and to encourage me to just read more, here are my…

#3Books

The premise is simple – share the three books you love most from your time as a child, adult and parent.

Childhood

When I was small, my favourite author was Enid Blyton and my very favourite book was The Enchanted Wood, the first of four books in The Faraway Tree series.

It’s about three siblings – Jo, Bessie and Fanny (no giggling) – who discover a tree inhabited by (among others) a man covered in saucepans called, um, Saucepan Man, and another man with a moon-shaped, glowing face called, err, Moon-face.

At the top of the tree is a purple cloud and beyond that is a portal to limitless other worlds. The worlds above the cloud rotate so that it’s anyone’s guess where’ll you’ll end up when you start scaling the tree, and if you don’t come back in time, the worlds rotate again and you’re stuck in that world forever. HOW COOL IS THAT?!

Sometimes the worlds they end up in are nice but sometimes they’re actually rather terrifying. Seriously exciting for a young child to read, although I’m still a little scared of Dame Slap and her school for naughty pixies.

Adulthood

So, so tough to choose a favourite book, isn’t it? But I’m going to go with Slaughterhouse Five. It’s a strange mix of wartime drama, historical account, comedy, autobiography and sci-fi.

Billy Pilgrim is an American prisoner of war caught at the heart of the fire-bombing of Dresden during WWII (as Vonnegut himself was). He lives his life in a non-linear fashion, experiencing his life, loves and death in entirely the wrong order, punctuated by time on planet Tralfamadore, where he is exhibited in a zoo along with another human – a Hollywood movie star – Montana Wildhack.

The style of narrative and plot throw up fundamental questions about the accepted nature of literature, humanity and free will. I’d like to say more about it, but I don’t want to spoil the story. Just read it. You won’t regret it.

Parenthood

Our favourite book to read once JD is curled up under the covers and ready for story time is The Smartest Giant in Town.

It’s by the same genius lady that brought us The Gruffalo and The Snail and the Whale and is so much fun to read. Unlike some of her other stories, it doesn’t rhyme on every line. Instead you have a page or two of prose, and then a little song.

It’s about generosity over vanity. Kindness over skin deep beauty. Friendship over material possessions. In short, it’s a lovely message to go to sleep with. And being a Julia Donaldson book, it’s also beautifully illustrated by Alex Scheffler.

So there you have it, three books that hold a special place in my heart. What are yours?

If you want to take part in #3Books, just write about your favourite book in childhood, adulthood & parenthood, then use the Linky and badge below.

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