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Barbie Tales
©Lisa Barker
When my toddler walks by with a naked Barbie doll, her hair drenched and
dripping, I know Barbie has been skinny-dipping in the toilet. Call it a
mother’s instinct. No matter what the circumstances are, moms have a way of
putting two and two together and coming up with the exact scenario.
Too bad I’m not psychic. Think of all the horrors I could save Barbie from.
Like that time she and her friends had been decapitated and Mom had to discern
which head belonged to which doll. What is it with boys and decapitation?
My girls look at a Barbie and they see a mother, a teacher, a nurse or some
other role they would like to play. My sons look at a Barbie and they see an
opportunity to pull somebody’s legs, arms and head off and hide them in various
places around the house. Is this early serial killer play?
I hope not.
Still, I can imagine that Barbie and her friends are terrified of being
discovered by one of the boys. Who knows when the dolls will be jammed into a
too-small car, wearing only a knotted scarf and a single red boot, and sent
hurtling down the hallway where they will smash headlong into the wall? No crash
dummy ever had it so rough.
But this doesn’t just happen in my house. A friend of mine described a day when
she was cleaning her home in the anticipation of company and at the last moment
found Barbie and several of her friends, naked and dangling helplessly in the
Ficus tree.
Now some moms will not allow their girls to play with Barbie dolls. They don’t
want their girls to grow up thinking that the ideal woman is twelve inches tall
with a four-inch bust and a waist to match. But my sisters and I are living
proof that girls can play with Barbie dolls and aspire to a much larger bust
measurement.
Our minds were never narrowed by Barbie’s perfect image.
In fact, when one of our Barbie dolls lost an arm or leg or suffered a broken
neck, they were mended as well as we could manage and they remained a part of
the Barbie clan. As children, we opened the doors of equality and paved the way
for handicapped Barbie dolls of every color, size and shape…and that translated
into our character and attitude later in life.
My girls do that with their own dolls. Barbie really brings out their nurturing
side.
Suddenly, I hear the predictable cry of outrage as another Barbie is discovered
dismembered and buried in a shallow grave of Legos. It looks like my daughters
will have a lot more nurturing to do real soon.
Jelly Mom™ is
written by Lisa Barker, mother of five and author of "Just
Because Your Kids Drive You Insane...Doesn't Mean You Are A Bad
Parent!" and is syndicated through Martin-Ola Press/Parent To
Parent.
To publish Jelly Mom, buy the book or leave comments, please
visit http://www.jellymom.com.
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