strange_complex: (Me as a child)
[personal profile] strange_complex
I'm pretty sure I'll never be more excited about a Christmas present than I was in the year (1985, I think) that my sister and I jointly received a My Little Pony Dream Castle from our paternal grandparents. This was at the height of the My Little Pony craze in the UK, and Dream Castle was the ultimate, top-of-the-range, much-coveted playset. Though we could buy individual ponies ourselves after a few weeks of patient saving up, Dream Castle was well beyond our wildest pocket-money dreams - so of course we had pined after it for weeks and could barely contain ourselves at the thought of actually owning it. And as our collection at that time was fairly small, consisting of perhaps 3-4 ponies each, receiving this huge exciting playset that was every MLP-loving little girl's fondest dream really did make a huge difference to the number of little characters we had to play with and the environments we could put them in.


It is of course symptomatic of what an expensive playset it was that even as a Christmas present it had to be shared between the two of us rather than given to either of us individually. I can report to our credit, though, that even though I was only 9 years old and my sister only 4, we did actually share it between us very fairly and politely, taking a week at a time to alternately 'own' the pony Majesty who came with it and her little pet dragon Spike. As an adult I suppose I could say that part of the reason I still remember that gift so fondly is that its shared nature symbolised what was really best of all about our My Little Pony play - that it made for a very successful bridge between two sisters who were quite far apart in age on a childhood scale, allowing us to come together in imaginative story-making and role-play, building cardboard houses, making clothes etc. But honestly as a child it was just all about owning the magic, and perhaps also having the prestige amongst our peers which came from having what was widely recognised as the coolest MLP playset on the market. If we had to share with each other in order to get that, then that was just a price worth paying.

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Date: Monday, 10 December 2012 00:54 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kernowgirl.livejournal.com
I've been meaning to comment on this post, because it brought up so many feelings for me, due to both nostalgia for my childhood and my own son's current joy in the playsets he received for his birthday. It gave me a lot of food for thought when comparing the playsets and expectations of possessing them in my day and in his....

But I don't have time to write it all out, so I'm just going to say thank-you for posting.

Date: Monday, 10 December 2012 15:44 (UTC)
ext_550458: (Darth blogging)
From: [identity profile] strange-complex.livejournal.com
Ah, well, perhaps it is something you could store away for a future post on your non-LJ blog? I'd certainly be interested to see what you have to say on the topic, and of course it would work quite well in the post-Christmas period, as you could talk about your son's reactions to his Christmas presents. But obviously I fully understand that you have other stuff on your mind right now.

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