127 answers

Play Kitchen for a Boy???

My daycare provider told me that my 17 mo old son loves to play with her kitchen set. He loves to open and put stuff in the drawers and cabinets and play with the pots and pans etc... I mentioned to my husband and my mom that I would like to get one for him for christmas. They were appalled...and said that kitchen sets are for girls. Any comments or ideas???

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

I don't see anything wrond with a boy playing with that. My son is now 5 and he always played with my daughter when she had one when she was younger. Have fun and get him one.

I know I may be a little late with this advice but I have a 3 year old boy. He also loves to play with the kitchen set at daycare. But I think he likes it so much because it is something he doesn't get to play with at home. He sees us in the kitchen with the pots and pans and all of that stuff and he wants to do it to. I think it is perfectly fine for boys to play with "girl-said" toys. I had the same reaction from my husband and he made a good point. If we were to get him a kitchen set for at home, he'd loose interest in the one that was at daycare. He has many other things at home to keep him occupied so not getting one was nice to know he always had the one at daycare to enjoy. C.

My boys loved kitchen sets too! I think all kids do! We ended up getting them a tool box....and they put dishes in there. (Made daddy happy!)

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Hi J., How would your mom love to have a grandson who's a world-class chef?! What do they think...it'll make him gay? Pish-posh (my brother played Barbies with me and he's your typical F-15 fighter pilot jock). I can also say this because I have 3 small boys and one of them LOVES playing "kitchen", too. He has a really small sesame street kitchen, but I want to get him a bigger one that he can stand and play at. I want my boys to be able to take care of themselves before they leave my house, and being able to cook a meal for themselves (not just know how to toast bread and use the microwave)is a skill I think is important to have - also helps make them more desireable as a future spouse! Kids learn a lot from play and at his age, he's probably learning skills like taking turns, serving others, and being independent. Talk to your pediatrician about the skills he may be learning from this and use that as "ammo" if you're wanting to get him a kitchen! Good Luck!

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Hello,
my son is 3 1/2 and has had his kitchen for over a year. He loves it and loves cooking for any one that comes over. It doesn't make him less of a boy. He still loves cars, trains, and playing cowboy. It's great to have a kitchen for when girls are over to play. I figure I'm raising someone's future husband here and don't we all love a man that cooks and cleans. My soon to be ex-husband was absolutetly irrepairably spoiled by his mother who did all of his laundry, cooking, cleaning, etc. I want my son to be a husband that we all dream of having. I'm praying that having a kitchen and making him help out (yes he cleans and vacuums at 3) will dramatically increase my odds at marrying him off to a great gal who will give me lots of grandchildren.

1 mom found this helpful

As a (licensed and degreed!) preschool teacher, I hear this type of thing all the time. My response? This is an activity where ALL children learn cooperation, use language skills, verbalize ideas and conce;ts, understand emotions, communicate with others, obseve others, use fine and gross motor muscles, understand the feeling of others, and act out real life situations. As a mother and wife, my response is "where else will he learn to be a good daddy and husband if not by playing with babies and toy food"! We just got our daughter a kitchen for x-mas. It is a nice pink, blue and yellow pastel set...that should really set your husband off! You do what you know is right!

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I couldn't help it, but I had to let my husband answer this one... T.

The vast majority of culinary professionals are men. If your husband thinks it's woman's work tell him to go stand in a 115 degree restaurant kitchen and cook to order 200 dinners in a few hours. This will have to be done in a safe and sanitary way. It will have to be done with limited resources. It will have to be done profitably and it will have to be done better or cheaper than the place down the street if the restaurant is going to stay open. You may also want to let him know that they've discovered that the Earth isn't flat and the moon isn't made of cheese. Get your son the kitchen set and some play-doh and when he's old enough get Ratatouille (Pixar movie). The culinary craft is incomprehensible for large segments of our society these days, and embraced enthusiastically by others. The profession is brutal at times, but also rewarding. I told my mom I wanted to be a chef when I was five. Thirty years later I am. Chris

1 mom found this helpful

My first thought was- are they serious!!!!
I believe (and have been in classes where we have been told (uwm- sociology and psychology!)) that it is healthy for all boys to play with kitchens, babies, doll houses, dress up clothes, purses- WHO CARES!! They need to learn to be gentle, there is no evidence that he will be gay if that is what they are worried about! AND he's having fun! Why are gender roles so important?! More importantly why are we forcing our children into the stereotypical gender roles. If my son is a fabulous chef who helps me around the house when he's a teen I will be thrilled!
More down to earth- it's completely normal- just about all day care centers have them along with dolls etc. and if your son likes it I think it is a great gift. My 20 mo old has played with it since I can remember and it is a favorite toy of the 6yr old I watch after school. It will grow with him- you can spice it up if he gets bored with new pots or food or gadgets.
Good Luck

1 mom found this helpful

THey are completly wrong!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Men and women cook. It's okay if he has a doll too because boys grow up to be daddies!! My 5 yr old plays house with his sister all the time with the kitchen and dolls and he is one of the roughest, toughest little boys I know. This is play that mimics real life, not some girly, sissy thing that might make him "gay". I've heard it all before. Don't let narrow minded people set the limits for your son.

1 mom found this helpful

Why the hell not? Men cook - doesn't mean they are gay or less manly!

1 mom found this helpful

Tell them to get a life. Role playing and imaginary playing is good for children. It's not going to make them gay to play with a kitchen, have a baby doll or even take dance classes. My son loves his, cooks me meals, pretends to do dishes. We got one of the little tikes ones that makes sounds when they are cooking. The only men that are concerned about their boys playing with kitchens are the ones that are not completely secure of themselves.
C.

1 mom found this helpful

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