Many parents who prefer non-electronic toys feel that these toys foster imaginative play and learning better than electronic toys that often have limited ways in which to use them. Here are a few additional reasons why I personally love non-electronic toys:
1. They don’t drive you crazy with inane music and psychotic, repetitive sounds. I loved our Tiny Love Gymini, but the electronic kick pad that comes with it makes the most bizarre combination of sounds. Music, laughter, dogs barking, roosters crowing, you name it, it’s all in there, simultaneously. It’s like a bad acid trip. I’d rather listen to just about anything my son can bang, clang, and bash on. And the music in most electronic toys is not usually something you want to get stuck in your head, trust me.
2. They are less likely to overstimulate or scare your kids. My son is a sensitive fellow and gets easily overstimulated. Things with lots of flashing lights, sounds, and movement tended to freak him out when he was an infant. Heck, the toy bar that came with the Rainforest bouncer freaked us out, I guess the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree. Apparently I got scared on the “It’s a Small World” ride at Disneyland and those slow moving animatronic Santas still give me the creeps. And remember the Elmo doll that threatened to kill a kid? That’s not going to happen with a low-tech stuffed animal.
3. No batteries means no hidden costs, less impact on the environment, no fiddling with screwdrivers, and no tears when little Timmy’s little talking gizmo has suddenly gone mute. Besides batteries, electronic toys are not the best choice for the environment because of the production and disposal of their circuit boards and microchips.
4. Non-electronic toys can be cheaper. Sure, the fancy wooden European toys are pricey but there are plenty of non-electronic toys that are cheaper than their electronic counterparts (like one of my faves, the $3 Magic Mic). And as all parents know, some of the best “toys” are things you already have lying around your house – empty boxes, tupperware, pots and pans, water, the cat, etc. Can’t get much cheaper than free! I will be featuring some of our favorite non-toy toys on this site.
5. Nostalgia. As a child of the 1970′s, I have fond memories of playing with Tinkertoys, Lincoln Logs, spinning tops, silly putty, bead mazes and the like. My husband was a lego fiend. We can’t wait to share our childhood favorites with our son and get to enjoy them all over again. Hey – isn’t that one of the reasons people have kids in the first place, to relive their childhood a bit?