By Goldie Taub Chernoff
Pictures by Margaret Hartelius
Copyright 1971
My children are in their twenties, yet we still have a
playroom full of toys. Some of these
toys are homemade, some are gifts from Christmases and birthdays past, some are
pre-loved toys we found at garage sales or flea markets, and some have now been
enjoyed by two generations of children.
My Fisher Price Little People Schoolhouse and Mike’s box of Matchbox
cars still sit out on the shelf. These
are all well-loved toys that come with happy memories. Still, when we get together and talk about
the “old days”, one of the best memories comes from an amazing two-story maze
and fort fabricated from a set of huge cardboard boxes that kitchen cabinets
were shipped in. For a few months, the
basement was taken over by this fort and many happy hours were spent literally
getting lost in it.
A cardboard box is a blank slate. It can be anything you want it to be. A Little Tykes play house is basically used
only as a playhouse. A plain box is a
playhouse, a rocket ship, a train, a hiding place, a castle, or a cave.
The toy marketing industry tries to tell us otherwise, but
we know the truth. Children prefer
playing with boxes than the toys that come in them.
A store bought toy has one use. A
cardboard box can be unlimited.