As I imagine everyone in the genre knows by now, April is Autism awareness month, and therefore time again for R J Scott’s amazing Blog Hop event. Click on the image to the left to go to her masterpost.
We start with a fact:
34% of children on the autism spectrum say that the worst thing about being at school is being picked on.
Children can be very unforgiving of other children who don’t conform to the world view that they are just beginning to formulate for themselves with the help of parents siblings and relatives. The trick is to catch that early one and stop it before it can turn into picking on, or even bullying. And for that adults need to be educated as well. We’re never too old to learn.
The subject we have been given for our posts is “Childhood Toys”.
Obviously my mind went straight to history – in fact prehistory – and I wondered what is the oldest child’s toy to be found.
This is quite hard to establish. Children’s toys need to be small, portable and, usually, organic – soft and cuddly with no sharp edges. Sadly organic things tend not to survive for very long so we are left with more robust materials, ie harder to work, more valuable, more highly prized. Such valuable items in metal, stone or wood have usually been attributed either to use or ritual. If one digs up a human figurine painstakingly carved from stone or bone can one say for certain that it’s a votive offering to the gods – or a dolly?
Tiny depictions of kitchenware found in tombs – an expression of what one will need in the afterlife or dolls tea party?
Sometimes we’re lucky and not only find objects, but also find illustrative material. It seems that grooved clay discs that were initially assumed to be parts of a loom are actually yoyos.
Wheeled objects are very popular – chariots of course, and Scythian children appear to have played with little facsimiles of the wagons they lived in.
But you can put wheels on anything – horses, lions, even hedgehogs!
This stone hedgehog was made in Iran some 3000 years ago. But older toys have been found including the item below. This bone disc has a hole in the middle and on each side is an incised image of an antelope. It is 30,000 years old.
This may have been a thaumatrope – the toy made by spinning two images on a string so they appear to be one.
In the image on the reverse the antelopes legs are drawn up. Twist the string and it appears to twitch its ears and jump.
Was this a toy to amuse a child, or a religious ritual? We don’t know for sure but I can’t see any reason why it can’t have been both.
Time for a giveaway – I will pick a commenter to win a novel from my books page.
If you would like to donate to a charity that does sterling work in providing for the needs of autistic young people, I don’t think that you could do any better than RJ’s charity of choice – Lindengate.
Lindengate is a Buckinghamshire-based registered charity that offers specialised gardening activities to help those with mental health needs in their continuing recovery
Operating from a 5-acre site adjacent to the Wyevale Garden Centre in Wendover Lindengate offers a wide range of gardening/horticulture activities so that users can spend time in a managed and calm and safe environment, either singly or in small groups, working towards recovery.
Thanks for the great post. My favorite toys were my Breyer horses.
Thanks for the giveaway and an interesting post. I have supported Lindengate in the past and will continue to do so.
Thanks commenting 🙂
Interesting post. Since play is how we learn, I think there have always been toys. My favorites were Legos.
Thank you for the post and taking part in the hop!
That was a really interesting post. My favourites where teddy bears…
I loved the Magical Musical Thing (which I explained in greater detail in my comment on RJ’s master post)…