I was at a play group today and one of the 2 yr olds had brought a toy with her. Daisy, my one year old, walked over to the toy, which was sitting on the floor a few feet away. The little girl was sitting on her moms lap and didn't want to play. I didn't think anything of it but the mom told her no no and that it wasn't hers. Daisy just kind of looked at her and reached for it again. The mom asked the two year old if she would allow daisy to play with her toy. The little girl said no. The mom looked at me and said it looks like she's not sharing right now. I was shocked. I know it is her toy and not daisy's but she wasn't playing with it at all, I just was a little taken back that she had the perfect opportunity to teach her child to share but she chose not to. When we are in group I always make try to make sure my kids are sharing if they are playing with their toys or someone else's. Am I judging to much or do you think she should have made her child share?
Re: Sharing
I think there's a movement now to treat kids and their stuff like adults do... like, say my computer and I are sitting at a coffee shop and I'm not using it at the time. If someone walked up to me and asked to use it to surf the internet, it's completely socially acceptable for me to say no because I wouldn't necessarily want a stranger using my computer. On the flip side, we expect kids to share everything without respecting that they might not want to at the moment (even if it is "just" a toy to us).
I don't really know how I feel about it to be honest, but I do remember reading that in passing. It might be what that mom was implementing.
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I don't think that works in this scenario. Because sure you wouldn't share your computer with a stranger but if you were out to coffee with your friend and they asked to use it you'd very likely let them.
If the OP was at a park and a bunch of random children were playing and OP's DD went to get someone's toy it is the OPs duty to say "No No DD that's not ours we don't play with it". But they were at a play date, playing together which kind implies they share together because they are friends. At least that would be my expectation.
I'd like to think I'd teach my son that if a toy is so valuable he can't share with someone we need to leave it at home. I don't know if that logic is able to work with a 2 yr old. Mrs. JudgeyMcJudgerton (ME) believes that other Mom missed a moment to teach her older daughter to share.
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I agree with this 100%! I am of the camp that if you are at a play date and you bring out a toy, it better be something everyone else can play with. If it is that valuable and loved, then it stays at home or in the car. I feel like this was a missed opportunity for the mom and girl.
In general, I agree that it's a good learning opportunity but at the same time I don't think I'd judge without really knowing the full situation.
ETA: I just realized Daisy is your daughter and not the other kid. So disregard that part.
The girl is two not exactly an age to teach in a mixed group. The mom asked her if she felt like sharing and the girl said no. End of story.
Maybe it is something they are working on just not in that setting.
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