5 Birthday Gifts for the Toddler Who Has Everything

I have three kids. One is 8 (I have no idea what you call the 8-year-old phase of life) and the other two are toddlers. This means that I have some experience - and expertise - in the art of what toddlers like. Which is important because one of the most frequent questions Iโ€™ve received…

I have three kids. One is 8 (I have no idea what you call the 8-year-old phase of life) and the other two are toddlers. This means that I have some experience - and expertise - in the art of what toddlers like. Which is important because one of the most frequent questions Iโ€™ve received in life is โ€œwhat should I get for your kid for his/herย birthday?โ€ I'm fortunate.

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

If youโ€™re like me and mines, though you will publicly declare on the social medias your ย plan to NOT have a birthday party celebrating each year of your kidโ€™s life (often stating things like, โ€œtheyโ€™ll never remember anywayโ€ and โ€œthatโ€™s too expensiveโ€) you absolutely will find ways to have celebrations where you invite all of the adults you know with chirrens. Some of these events will have liquor because any party with 20 children under 10, no matter the age distribution, variance, or standard deviation, will be an absolute madhouse and a drink or twelve wouldnโ€™t even be frowned upon by child services.

To accompany any toddlerโ€™s birthday party is usually a plethora of gifts the parents already own (we all shop at the exact same places AND people buy gifts from the same places we shop) and gift cards. Gift cards are awesome because they can be used to buy things we donโ€™t already have, typically the things we need. But hereโ€™s the real question: What do the kids want? Itโ€™s the question every kid wants to let you know the answer to, but when you can only say that youโ€™re โ€œthis manyโ€ when somebody asks your age, thereโ€™s a good chance articulating your wants is difficult.

Well, because Iโ€™m feeling generous today and because I have so much experience in the Child Arts, here are the things that Iโ€™ve noticed that my kids and other peopleโ€™s kids that Iโ€™ve been around seem to enjoy the most (and thus want), assuming youโ€™re looking to get things for them and not just come drink my fine liquors at the birthday party.

1. Bubbles

You can go spend $75 on that plastic builder set that Iโ€™ll open, spend two hours assembling thatโ€™s missing a few screws for some odd reason, that my kids will kinda sorta maybe play with by coloring on it and putting stickers all over turning it into a living art installation that will likely NEVER get used for its intended purpose OR you can go spend $10 bucks and get, like, 5 bubble wands or some sort of bubble maker and make these children happier than they ever knew was possible. I donโ€™t know what it is about bubbles, but to kids, bubbles are THE SHIT. Take some kids outside and blow some damn bubbles and youโ€™ll see pure, unmitigated joy, love, and happiness that even Al Green couldnโ€™t articulate. Bubbles is where itโ€™s at, fam.

2. Outside

Say heffa, say what? ย Outside? Yaaaaaaaaaasss. Outside. Listen, there is nothing more alluring to a kid who says โ€œnoโ€ โ€œmineโ€ and โ€œbubblesโ€ than outside. True story, my one-year-old pitches a pure fit EVERY.TIME. somebody walks out the door at my home and he doesnโ€™t get to go. Itโ€™s like outside is the worldโ€™s greatest club and he canโ€™t get in. He cannot get into the outside. Word to Home. Outside is the gift that keeps on giving. To kids, the outdoors is an amazing array of possibilities, even if you literally only goย into the backyard or ย to the sidewalk. Nigga, if you take a kid outside with bubbles? Bruh. You might as well be Black Jesus.

3. Blocks

Iโ€™m loathe to say blocks because itโ€™s the one thing that Iโ€™m guessing most ย homes from the least well-off to the most financially stable have in abundance. Kids love them some blocks. Even big kids can find something to do with a buffet of colorful blocks laying on the floor. The thing about blocks is that they get lost, misplaced, and thrown away very easily. A set that starts out at 100 on Monday is probably down toย 37 on Friday. More blocks. I can just put them bitches in a closet and pull them out when needed. I took my two-year-old son to Toys โ€˜R Us the other day to let him pick out anything he wanted (under $20 bucks but he ainโ€™t need to know all of that) and sure as shootinโ€™, he picked out some more blocks. Blocks for the win.

4. Water

I know. This one also makes no sense. But listen, kids love water. Itโ€™s like โ€œoutsideโ€ to them. They just want to be part of it and play with it and splash it and throw it. They donโ€™t care if itโ€™s a bathtub or outside with bubbles in a plastic kiddie pool. Water is always the win. You show up with a gallon of water and my kid will be dumbfounded. You pour said water in the bathtub and put them in there and Black Jesus again. Dog, the sprinkler?ย All the giggles.

5. Boxes

Have you ever watched kids at Christmas open gifts? The boxes get all the run from tiny kids. Get you a pack of boxes and you might ascend to auntie or uncle status. Put some blocks in that box? And bubbles? Bruh.

Bonus: iPad

My two-year-old knows entirely how to navigate the world of my iPad, both utilizing Netflix, pulling up his sisterโ€™s account and choosing movies to his liking. The same with YouTube Kids videos. He has favorites. For those that donโ€™t know, videos of white people opening up toys is very popular for some reason. White people stay winning.

Straight From The Root

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