Wednesday 11 July 2012

Toys


When I say toys I’m talking about childhood toys.  If your mind immediately went to sex toys you are a bad person and should be ashamed of yourself.



Anyway, I’m talking about the toys of my childhood- the ones that I cannot bear to throw away because I get a distinct little stomachy squeezy feeling whenever I think about them.  In fact, I find it baffling that people could ever get rid of old toys; you see all the time on books and on TV that children, once they reach a certain age, feel that their toys are uncool and either throw them away or give them away.  I suppose giving them away is rather benevolent so I can't really fault it, but I cannot understand what goes through someone’s mind when they distance themselves from such a distinct part of their childhood.  To me, it is akin to giving away part of your soul.

I am probably one of the least spiritual/religious and most logical, reasonable people you will ever meet.  The furthest I would ever go would be to say that humans may one day in the distant future develop telekinetic powers, (at least I hope they will!) but I’ll talk about that some other time.  The one part of me that is completely illogical and irrational is apparent when I am around soft toys.

You see, I know that objects cannot have consciousness.  I KNOW that, but I also know with sheer certainty that my soft toys have developed consciousness because of the love that I have given them.  With every game that I played with them, with every characteristic I have decided that they possessed, they have become more and more alive.  They may just be lumps of stuffing and material to everyone else, but to me, they are my best friends.  They’ve certainly been closer to me than most humans have.  If I ever lost Duck, for example, (Duck is a duck that I got for my first birthday) I would be so crestfallen that I don’t know what I’d do with myself.  I love Duck more than almost everyone in the world, but I’m so scared about damaging her (she is very old now) that I avoid cuddling and touching her excessively, instead just talking to her and letting her watch over me.  This is a little sad because toys are meant to be cuddled.

Toys can also be really, REALLY scary because of this power they are able to build up inside them from people’s love.  The other day Foofy and I went to Le musée de la poupée (Doll Museum) in Paris, and it was utterly macabre.  Here is a selection of my favourite/ones that almost caused me to soil myself.

 

Evil:

 


 

This one is definitely going to consume me entirely starting with my eyes:

 


 

No! I don’t want to play!!!!!

 


 

It’s coming.  IT’S COMING FOR ME:

 


 

I DON’T WANT TO LIVE IN A WORLD WHERE THIS IS OKAY:

 


 

I joke about these monstrosities, but in reality they make me very sad.  You see, I like to see toys that have obviously been loved and cared for in their lives.  When I go to a friend’s family home and see that they have a bear with bald patches or something I always pick it up and give it a kiss because I want to be a part of how much love has been infused into it.  The thing about these dolls is, apart from being dolls (I only ever played with soft toy animals- apart from Barbies I never liked dolls), anyone who has ever truly loved or doted on these creatures is now long dead, and, thus, they are dead in a sense too.  When a toy stops being cared for, it dies. (According to my ‘religion’ at least.)  These dolls still have life in them because they gain a minute amount of life energy by so many people simply looking at them, but not enough to make them truly alive.  The reason these dolls are creepy is because around them is an aura of death and loneliness caused by years, sometimes centuries of them being behind a glass case having people stare at them, but nobody actually loving them.  Their souls, unlike that of Duck and my other friends, exist, trapped in their bodies, wistfully hoping that someone will come along and care for them as much as their first owner did 150 years ago, but as time has gone by, they are gradually giving up hope.

 

I don’t want that to ever happen to my friends, but it makes me sad to think that it might one day.

 

4 comments:

  1. I would never go so far as saying that stuffed animals don't have consciousness. I know that they don't have a consciousness on their own, but in interaction with people (like me and Frances) they certainly have a share of the shared consciousness of those people, and I certainly find them to be much more interesting personalities than most "real" people. I won't bore you with any details, suffice it to say that (1) I am bullied by a tiger on a daily basis; (2) there is a bear I call "my oldest friend" but he sneeringly call me "subject"; (3) the bear organized his own Apprentice, with the tiger as his Nick, and with sixteen other stuffed animals that he fired one per week to keep up with Lord Sugar...

    ReplyDelete
  2. OH MY GOD, My flatmate and I have something very similar where Wee Pups is the boss and he has to systematically fire all our other friends. Wee Pups is actually Lord Sugar's boss and has the most business acumen out of anyone I know. I'll do a post about all my major friends tomorrow actually instead of just talking about them here! :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Good heavens. How many more like us are there out there? I'll run a research survey on this, I think.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I always used to rescue unwanted/ uncared for cuddly toys, especially from school fetes/ car boot sales etc (much to my mother's despair) meaning that I ended up with somewhere between 150 and 200 of them... I also couldn't bear the thought of them not being played with and loved and cuddled as they always had been so when I got to the point that it wasn't really practicable to have 150 soft toys I donated them to a Romanian orphanage. I like to think that every single one of those soft toys now has someone to love it and all the orphans have something to love... much better than them sitting & gathering dust either in my Mum's house or my own. Although there were a few I couldn't bear to part with.

    ReplyDelete