Feb 03

One of my favourite things to play with when I used to be a kid was my cowboy outfit. It consisted of a cowboy hat, suede waistcoat and a six-shooter in a holster. I used to practice my fast draw before the mirror, obsessed as I was by the westerns on telly and films. When I grew older, I developed a taste for pacifism and I turned against toy guns. My man and I both agreed to raise our children without recourse to toy pistols, rifles or machine guns and so on.

I find it depressing as I am going round toy departments, to see toy grenades, fire throwers and all manner of armaments. Our children failed to have toy guns of any type and we told our loved ones not to buy them as presents. Other people , who had given their children toy guns, took it as a private feedback and were offended.

For us, it was simply a private call about how we would have liked to raise our children. We wanted our kids to reach adulthood in an environment of love and toleration.

We did not want influences like toy guns to meddle with that. I see it as a confusing contradiction when you tell your youngsters not to battle in the playground because fighting is inaccurate, and then you inspire them to pretend to spray their mates with machine gun fire.

It’s only pretend, say our objectors, but I suspect it’s giving violence a seal of approval. After playing a game of slaughtering folks all day with toy guns or games, they lose empathy for the genuine thing. It’s cool to join a gang and act out fantasies in reality. Kids should be shown the consequences of violence. I do not mean we should reveal them to scare horror scenes, but they must notice that people who are shot and stabbed don’t simply stand up and walk away. We must stop violence being romanticized. There’s nothing pretty about being shot and there’s nothing fantastic about war. I believe everybody should throw the toy guns away and take the kids round a vet’s hospice to see the effects of firing a trigger. One other thing.

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Jan 02

When A.A.Milne had his first Pooh Bear story printed in 1926, he could not have known how his Winnie the Pooh personality would become loved by youngsters and their fogeys all around the globe.

The bear was named after the stuffed bear owned by Milne’s boy, Christopher Robin. Milne started writing the stories as entertainment for his young boy.

Naturally, the personality of the boy named after his child also includes in the stories together with other chums like Piglet, Tigger, and Eeyore. All of them live happily and have journeys in the Hundred Acre Wood, a location based mostly on the genuine life forest where the Milne family lived in Britain .

The Winnie the Pooh personality is a lovable, friendly bear who has an easy outlook on life. He only desires honey, chums and a game of poohsticks to be cheerful. Poohsticks is actually played on the streams of Britain and there is a yearly competition for it. It involves dropping sticks into the stream from a bridge, as in the stories, and the 1st stick to complete over the line is announced the winner. Shepard drawings to the Disney version of the Winnie the Pooh personality. However, the majority of folks know the Pooh stories thru the Disney films. They are immensely favored and have been one of Disney’s most successful franchises. State of the art, PC helped toons are very hot now but everybody still loves Pooh. There are Television shows and Playstation games in addition to the films and a selection of product.

You can get stuffed toys, lunch boxes, pencil sets and so on. Pooh is an example of the most enduring stars of kids’s literature. The Winnie the Pooh personality will not date and will remain a fave. His appeal was recognized when he was given a renowned star on the Hollywood Walk of Celebrity in 2006. Perhaps it remains so popular as it represents an idyll, a more trusting time when it was safe to go into the woods and play with your mates.

Latterly , some authors have taken the Winnie the Pooh personality rather seriously and written books to elucidate philosophy, using Pooh as an example. Maybe there’s something in the Zen of poohsticks to coach us all. One more thing.

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