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For the Love of .... Legos?

 

I love Legos.

I love how they can hold my kids’ attention for 20+ minutes at a time, sometimes even longer. I love how my son intensely follows the directions to create fantastically-complicated Lego masterpieces, often within minutes of receiving them as a birthday or Christmas gift. I love how my daughter uses her imagination to create Lego dogs and cars and robots. I love how my son easily improvises, building complex, freeform Lego machinery, transportation and weaponry. I love how Legos engage both sides of their brains. I love the Lego store: not the prices, but rather the fun of the monthly Lego club, where kids work together to complete a Lego challenge. I love the monthly Lego magazine because my kids love reading it. I love how, when playing with Legos, my kids are not wrestling, squabbling over the iPad, whining for whatever, spilling milk, watching TV, writing on walls (OK, they don’t do that anymore), attempting to launch themselves off of furniture … and so on. You get the drift.

I hate Legos.

I hate that they are everywhere. Freaking everywhere! I hate that, as my kids get bigger, the Lego pieces get smaller and more numerous. I hate that Lego pieces have this way of breeding, like little horny plastic bunnies—and then liberally distributing their spawn over every surface of my home. Not to mention everyone’s “favorite”: unexpectedly treading bare-foot on a Lego piece. (I’ll bet many a child has learnt some colorful new vocabulary from their parents every time it happens.) I hate that a “quick” visit to the Lego store turns into a painful, drawn-out no-fest that disappoints and frustrates everyone. No, you can’t have that $700 Harry Potter Lego rocket launcher set. No, you can’t have that $70 Star Wars Naboo Lego set. No, your $5 won’t be able to buy you anything here. No, we can’t stay another three hours.

I’ve also discovered that there are two types of parents.

There are those organizationally-talented (OCD?) types that have the skills, equipment, time and patience to collect their kids’ gazillion Lego pieces and then meticulously sort them by color, shape, theme, character, unit, dimension and purpose into designated, purpose-built storage units. And then keep them that way, no matter how often the kids remove said Lego pieces to build their next creation.

I wonder, do the parents themselves do all this sorting and organizing because they enjoy it? Because it fulfills some deep OCD need for order and control. Or is it because their kids won’t do it. Or maybe it’s because they have been pushed to the limits by all these blinking plastic pieces?!

So what about those other types of parents? Well, I fall into this latter category. Yes, I am organized, and sometimes a little OCD, about other certain aspects of domesticity, like the laundry and the dishwasher. But when it comes to the Lego litter, I am tortured, completely tortured and exasperated. Every which way I turn, there’s Lego!

Clean it up, you say. Not my job, I say.

I am NOT going to clean up my kids’ Lego chaos. After all, it’s their mess. (I often remind them about the time that Grandma actually vacuumed up our all Legos when we were kids and she had had it with the mess! Yes, it broke her vacuum but she said the satisfaction was worth it!) So either I take a chill pill and just accept it, or I get them to clean up their own Lego mess. I’m pulling for the latter.

But you’ll not find me maniacally sorting them, nor buying some expensive Lego storage unit. My kids can make do with our existing assortment of random plastic tubs. They can figure out their own system for sorting and organizing. I don’t care how as long as it’s all off the floor. And stays that way.

The only challenge now is to figure how to properly bribe—I mean motivate—them! We shall see...

Samantha McGarry is a working Mom, juggling family, a career working in Waltham and life one crazy day at a time—with a smile on her face. You can read more of her blogs at Keeping the Glass Half Full.

Karen Salemi

9:19 am on Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Hysterical! I loved your chart. Your tag line asking if we are OCD about sorting our childrens' Legos got me to read your article. Congratulations!

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Sean O'Donnell

2:16 pm on Wednesday, January 16, 2013

My parents used to throw away lego pieces if I left them around. More than a few times I would be rebuilding sets only to find that a piece or two had "gone missing" in to the trash barrel.
They did not sort, the only help they gave me keeping them organized was an old wrapping paper bin.

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Samantha McGarry

4:36 pm on Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Sounds like you are still scarred by the experience, Sean!

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Robert Rosen

2:27 pm on Wednesday, January 16, 2013

How many kids end up building those Star Wars spaceships on the box? I always ended up building a fort that looked exactly the same no matter which box the legos came in.

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Martha Creedon

5:21 pm on Wednesday, January 16, 2013

You could use up all the legos making one of these lego sorters: http://trib.al/vOm1fHl ... you will have no legos left to step on, but then again, you will have nothing left to sort!

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Mary Gonzales

10:43 pm on Wednesday, January 16, 2013

I have stepped on a few and I just wish to say the LEGOS have won more than their fair share of battles with my feet although I think I may have crushed a piece or two.

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Joseph Scola

7:13 am on Monday, January 21, 2013

Legos are the devils work! LOL!

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Mark Howell

8:07 am on Monday, January 21, 2013

When I was a kid, sorting the Legos after taking apart a project was automatic.
Pieces that belonged to a kit (windmill, Shell service station, etc) had to be kept together. General bricks had to be sorted by size and color (mostly red or white).
I was pretty obsessive about it; I didn't want to lose any pieces.
On the other hand I never bothered how my sons kept their Legos. I just kept getting larger and larger tubs for them to keep their unsorted Lego pieces in.

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Paula Mackenzi

9:27 am on Monday, January 21, 2013

Stepping on a Lego causes a human being to spew forth certain types of words that have yet to reach Webster's ears ..... Years ago I bought a container at that place on route 9 that has pull out levels in which different sized Legos can be stored. I also bought a train table at a bargain basement deal on which to display the Lego creations, and it is a dumping ground for random pieces. Presto - no more new words. And I also threatened to replace my son's pillow with a Lego filled pillow case if I ever stepped on another Lego. Haven't seen one random Lego piece ANYWHERE in months!

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PsandQs

9:06 pm on Monday, January 21, 2013

Excellent piece, Sam. I just bought a bin today at Target for storing my younger son's Lego pieces as he begins his collection - and so that they won't get mixed up with his older brother's because they know who's is who's and that leads to problems. Then I noticed the Lego Nano sets at the counter at Cloud Nine Toys in Sudbury...They are even smaller (and cooler) than the regular sets. May God help us all.

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Samantha McGarry

2:35 pm on Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Yes, sadly, we too have veered into the land of Nano legos. As I said, it's cruel that the bigger the kid gets, the smaller the Lego pieces get ....

andipandi

1:29 pm on Tuesday, January 22, 2013

I bought a couple organizers, but they only ever got sorted once or twice. Now there's one big bin for unused legos... and all available surface space is occupied by cities, spaceships, and other creations... I threaten the vacuum if they can't keep a path clean through the room.

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