I’m so happy that unicorns are no longer a gender stereotype.
I love unicorns like crazy and I’m a 34 year old guy.
Boys liking unicorns just wouldn’t go over well with most parents around where I live.
Lots of people around me are rigid and tend to be old fashioned far right rural families who don’t accept anything different or new.
These kinds of people would fear and wrongly believe that a boy or man liking a unicorn might mean he is queer or he should be seen more like a child rather than a man.
Unicorns do not mean any of those things and people need to not assume something so foolishly extreme.
A unicorn is depicted as a horse with a horn.
Just having that horn alone makes it something for girls only.
Boys here are allowed to have plain hornless horses at the most because then they can pretend to be cowboys and such.
a unicorn is just a unicorn and it doesn’t mean someone is less of a man and it’s not to be taken as a symbol of anything.
if I were not allowed to have unicorns in my life, I would have never made it.
my first unicorn toy was a purple plush unicorn at Toys R Us long ago and what I liked most about it was that the hairs were fiber optic and lit up.
That was the first time I ever saw fiber optic material.
and then there was another unicorn toy I had.
I have one thing to say to those guarded and foolishly insecure parents who try to say what toys are appropriate or not.
If a boy wants to play with dolls and such, consider that he is learning about what it’s like to be a father and take care of women and children.
The same as I heard if a girl wants to play with trucks, bulldozer and train sets, there are a large number of women who get into mechanical engineering and become construction contractors or train conductors.
so really no toy is going to make your child turn out one way or another, that’s a whole entirely different issue.
I’m so happy that unicorns are no longer a gender stereotype.
I love unicorns like crazy and I’m a 34 year old guy.
Boys liking unicorns just wouldn’t go over well with most parents around where I live.
Lots of people around me are rigid and tend to be old fashioned far right rural families who don’t accept anything different or new.
These kinds of people would fear and wrongly believe that a boy or man liking a unicorn might mean he is queer or he should be seen more like a child rather than a man.
Unicorns do not mean any of those things and people need to not assume something so foolishly extreme.
A unicorn is depicted as a horse with a horn.
Just having that horn alone makes it something for girls only.
Boys here are allowed to have plain hornless horses at the most because then they can pretend to be cowboys and such.
a unicorn is just a unicorn and it doesn’t mean someone is less of a man and it’s not to be taken as a symbol of anything.
if I were not allowed to have unicorns in my life, I would have never made it.
my first unicorn toy was a purple plush unicorn at Toys R Us long ago and what I liked most about it was that the hairs were fiber optic and lit up.
That was the first time I ever saw fiber optic material.
and then there was another unicorn toy I had.
I have one thing to say to those guarded and foolishly insecure parents who try to say what toys are appropriate or not.
If a boy wants to play with dolls and such, consider that he is learning about what it’s like to be a father and take care of women and children.
The same as I heard if a girl wants to play with trucks, bulldozer and train sets, there are a large number of women who get into mechanical engineering and become construction contractors or train conductors.
so really no toy is going to make your child turn out one way or another, that’s a whole entirely different issue.