49 answers

Should We Sell Our Daughter's Toy Without Her Permission?

Last year, when my stepdaughter was six, her grandpa bought her the Butterscotch FurReal Friends Pony. It is a $300 mechanical pony that's 3 feet high and responds to your touch. It munches on a fake carrot and swings its head around. You can even sit on it and it makes galloping sounds.

My stepdaughter (see previous question!!) wasn't very interested in it. She played with it for about 10 minutes and then started slapping it around. She was disappointed it didn't actually walk around. Her grandpa thought maybe she was just too old for it, I think the recommended age is 3-5. We put the horse in the car and it went home. Since there wasn't room in the house we put it in her grandma's basement, where it sat for a whole year. She never asked about it.

This year (she is seven now) money is tight. I suggested we sell the horse on ebay since I see they're going for about $150 or so and use the money for Christmas gifts for her. She hadn't seen the horse for over a year and NEVER MENTIONED IT.

We brought it to our condo and stuck it up in the attic storage. Hubby forgot it was up there and she went up there one day with him and saw it. She hugged it and petted it and then went downstairs. She hasn't asked about it.

Now my hubby feels guilty about selling her toy. He thinks we should ask permission to sell her toy since it belongs to her. I agree that it belongs to her as it was a gift, but she has shown no interest in it for over a year and it's too big for her bedroom (because of the other toys she DOES play with) or anywhere in our condo.

I'm pretty sure if we ask her she's going to say "no, I want to keep it." I believe if you ask a child something, you'd better be prepared to accept their answer!

She really wants an electric guitar for Christmas. My plan was to sell the pony and use the money to buy her the guitar, something she's been talking about for months. She's excited about lessons. Otherwise we can't afford the guitar. If she asks about the pony we'll tell her the truth. "You didn't play with the pony, and also it's too young for you. So we sold it and got you the guitar you wanted."

What do you think? Is it wrong to sell her toy without her permission? (Her grandpa already told us to sell it on ebay and get her something she would play with so he's not an issue.) Or is it our job as parents to make a good decision about her stuff, and also find ways to work within our budget for her to have toys she loves and uses?

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

I appreciate all the different responses! It would be hard to tell her we are selling it to buy the guitar if we want the guitar to be a surprise. We are also thinking that if we tell her she is too old for the horse, she'll want to give it to her little half sister on her mom's side. Although we all get along for her sake, we know my husband's dad would not like to think his gift went to be enjoyed by her half-sister, and there are too many hard feelings about that issue for us to be that generous.

We have decided to reason with her and "guide" her to the right answer. This way she'll be OK with letting the horse go (so she won't be upset later on when she asks about it).

First we'll do a lesson on giving away toys she doesn't play with that she's too old for. We'll bring her up to the attic and see if she points out the horse right away. If she truly isn't interested in it, then she may decide to get rid of it herself. We're not going to talk about "selling" it because that to he would imply she'd get money. If she doesn't point out the horse, we'll ask her to think of how many times she played with it. Then we'll try to get her to see that it hasn't been much, and wouldn't it be great for another little girl who really wants a horse to have one? We can even point out that grandpa has a REAL horse she can ride like a "big girl."

If she talks about giving it to her little sister we're going to explain that her little sister is too young for the horse, and that her mom doesn't have room to hold on to it until she grows up, and neither do we.

We are also going to say that Santa will be VERY proud of her for letting her give the pony to someone else that really wants one, and he may bring her something extra this year. We'll involve her in the giving the horse if we sell it on Craigslist or the shipping of it if we sell it on ebay. Ebay has a local pickup option, although I saw that those didn't have any bids and that some people put the shipping at $50 and those had bids.

If she's really stuck on keeping the horse, well as some pointed out it is HER horse, and we'd have to explain that you can't have everything. At that point we'd tell her that she'd have to get rid of some of her other toys in her room to make room for the horse because we are not keeping it in the attic to gather dust. And we'll set a good example by getting rid of some of OUR stuff too. We might also explain that she would not have room for a guitar and an amp with the horse in the room.

We will do our best to "guide" her to the right answer. I think if we do it with love she'll be fine!

Thanks everyone!

Featured Answers

She needs to be asked. It is a matter of trust. Explain to her if she sells the horse then she can pick out the guitar she wants.

Take care
J.

You could always keep her involved but ask a open question. For example, Spunky we are going to sell the pony to pay for the guitar or possible lessons do you want to sell it on ebay or try the newspaper. Or Spunky we are going to sell the pony would you like the money to go towards a guitar, guitar lessons or (one other option that she really wanted) Then both of you win, she feels like she was part of the decision making process and you are able to recoup some of the money for a large item that is doing nothing but collecting dust. Hope this helps!

Sell it and if she asks, it went to a farm... Buy her what she'll really like and she'll forget all about it. DON'T FEEL GUILTY! I'm ready to sell some stuff that never gets played with either. Happy Holidays!

More Answers

I purge my children's toys whenever I WANT to. Not after they give me permission. If I kept everything... do you know what my house would look like?

If you need the money and since she doesn't use it, I say get rid of it. That said. I would seek out other avenues of selling it because the shipping is going to be terrible on such a large item and perhaps a hassle. (I have never sold through ebay though)

Good Luck!

1 mom found this helpful

Believe me, as she continues to get older you will buy many things you think she will love but she will not. Go ahead and sell it and buy something else. My daughter is now a teen. When a buy her clothes, we have a rule. If she doesn't absolutely love something, we go back to the store within the week to exchange it otherwise it will get stuffed in the back of her closet. We can't keep everything in the house.

i'd sell the toy myself. it's big, it's seen almost no attention and certainly very little love for a year, and i see no problem with making the decision yourself/selves that the money you could get selling it would be better used on something she would hopefully enjoy and use a lot more. you're right -- if you ask her you will probably get a knee-jerk response that she wants to keep it, even though it obviously isn't something she has interest in. better to just bypass that mess and do what you feel is best.

You could always keep her involved but ask a open question. For example, Spunky we are going to sell the pony to pay for the guitar or possible lessons do you want to sell it on ebay or try the newspaper. Or Spunky we are going to sell the pony would you like the money to go towards a guitar, guitar lessons or (one other option that she really wanted) Then both of you win, she feels like she was part of the decision making process and you are able to recoup some of the money for a large item that is doing nothing but collecting dust. Hope this helps!

I say SELL THE PONY and get the guitar! My co-worker says to ask your stepdaughter and let her decide. Explain to her if you want a guitar, we need to sell the pony. This way, she will learn to appreciate what she has. You could also say that it could make another little girl very happy for the holidays. She is 7, so her answer might surprise you.

If you do decide to sell it, check out Craig's list - it's like Ebay but for local people so there's no shipping. That would be pricey on such a big item.
Good luck and let us know how it goes! :)

Yes, by all means, sell it!

Honestly, if she doesn't play with it, why keep it. I would sell it on ebay so you can get her something she will play with. If you ask your child about every toy they have, most likely you won't get rid of anything because they want to keep everything. Good luck

SELL IT! Who is running this show, you or her? THis isn't her favorite toy or her "blankee." This is a toy she never played with before and isn't playing with now. She'll never miss it, but if you give her the control now, you're teaching her a lesson you can never undo.

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