[blparent] fun stuff for boys

Pickrell, Rebecca M (IS) REBECCA.PICKRELL at ngc.com
Fri Dec 11 15:12:04 UTC 2009


You know, maybe your boys would like Civil War or Revolutionary
reenacting? 
They'd learn history, get to be outside, get to play solider, and would
probably enjoy it They'd also get to work in a group and learn how to be
part of a team. 
ROTC may be another good fit. 


-----Original Message-----
From: blparent-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blparent-bounces at nfbnet.org]
On Behalf Of Rhonda Scott
Sent: Thursday, December 10, 2009 6:40 PM
To: NFBnet Blind Parents Mailing List
Subject: Re: [blparent] fun stuff for boys

It does feel complicated. I have a similar situation with our 10 year
old. 
He loves war games and anything to do with computer games, TV, Wii, PS2
and 
movies. It's difficult to keep his attention, but he says often how he
would 
like to spend time doing things with us. So we're trying to find things
that 
are interactive, will pull him away from video games and TV, but will
also 
hold his attention. All you can do is keep trying, and share your 
frustrations with others who understand them. That's where I'm at right
now 
too.

Deven likes things for a short time, has a lot of broken toys he played
too 
rough with. That's frustrating too because I have problems buying him
new 
things when I'm afraid he will destroy them, whether on accident or on 
purpose. Kids like expensive things now, so it's hard to justify
spending if 
it will be broken in a week or 2, plus it hurts our feelings, frustrates
us 
and makes us angry. But I think there are answers and solutions, we just

need to find them somewhere, somehow.

I really want to show Deven that the blindness thing is not a huge
obstacle 
in terms of parenting him. All kids will test, and I find myself paying 
close attention to him because he tries to test often, doing things he 
thinks we won't notice. I want to interact with him more, but I am not
the 
ball playing type, and I can't throw a frisbee worth beans. I think it's

important for us, here, to show him we are parents, not blind parents,
if 
that makes sense. But I have turned this into a completely different
topic, 
I see. LOL

Rhonda

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Allison (NFBA)" <nfbarizona at gmail.com>
To: "NFBnet Blind Parents Mailing List" <blparent at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Thursday, December 10, 2009 4:26 PM
Subject: Re: [blparent] fun stuff for boys


Thanks all for suggestions.

Are the nurf balls still fun (and safe) for us to play with if they
don't
have bells in them?  Has anyone tried this?

I'll check out the discovery toys link.  Does anyone have specific
suggestions in terms of discovery toys?  I feel a little overwhelmed by
all
the choices.  Also I need something fairly high action to hold the
little
guy's interest.  He's used to the fast-paced nature of World of Warcraft
and
Wii games.  He's a smart kid though.  Grade level in reading and a grade
ahead in math.

We do have Braille cards that we play Go Fish and War with.  He loves Go
Fish.  We have Uno too but he gets bored quickly with that because the
games
can run so long.  We also have the Freeze-up talking category game that
he
loved for like a week and now never looks at.  *sigh*.  This feels so
complicated.

Thanks again,
Allison


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Veronica Smith" <madison_tewe at spinn.net>
To: "'NFBnet Blind Parents Mailing List'" <blparent at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Wednesday, December 09, 2009 7:35 PM
Subject: [blparent] fun stuff for boys


>I was at Walmart today and scooping out the toy section and saw some
really
> cool stuff that an 8 year old would love.
> Fur Real Friends had a dinosaur.  You put your hand or finger in its
mough
> and it bites down on you and makes a sound like it is eating your
hand.
> They also had dogs and cats, monkeys and other critters.
> They have Nerf balls and basketball rims and of course my absolute
> favorite
> Hot Wheel sets.  These are all the things I love to play with, with
Gab.
> You can be sighted or blind and have a great time with your
imagination.
> Alison, you can also buy regular playing cars that are Braille and
play
> games like Go Fish, Crazy Eights and of course War.
> V
>
>
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