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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Does it sound like my DD is normal for 10 years old?

388 replies

Normal10yoYesorNo · 11/01/2025 16:17

DD is 10, school year 6, will be 11 in 2025 but is the youngest in her year (end of July birthday).

ExH is insisting I baby her and that she’s too old to play with toys. Her school, however, have not raised any concerns from her play - they have a common room area for year 5s and 6s with age appropriate toys etc which DD loves, each class gets an hour a week in this common room (3 form entry school) and they’ve said DD plays fine with other girls (she rarely plays with the boys) and they play in an age appropriate way.

So does this sound normal:

  • Loves baby dolls – dresses them, feeds them, puts them to bed, talks to them while she’s doing it. Hands them to her friends/me/her grandparents/teacher to “look after” and tells us how to do it before going off to play with other toys
  • Also loves barbie dolls – dresses them up, has fashion shows, plays them as baby/dog/whatever sitter, brushes their hair. The children/baby barbies go to School and Guides etc while the adults do “boring” (her words) things like shopping and work
  • Loves card games like Uno and Snap
  • Loves some simpler board games like snakes and ladders
  • Loves Lego – builds houses, zoos, farms and schools but never vehicles or space station or similar (I think we had a church once but it was a one off). Has most of the animal sets and always builds big multi people houses/places then has the animals running wild looking for their owners/keepers, she finds this hilarious and plays it a lot – she doesn’t build particular sets as such but asks for the general boxes or specific ones if they have people/animals in she wants
  • She plays with things together so often the Lego Animals end up being the pets of the barbies etc.
  • Loves Stuffed Animals and has many – she likes to put on shows with these, she sings and leaps about while they watch.
  • Likes craft activities like card making, simple sewing, badge making – she absolutely loves glitter, stickers, glue, sequins etc.
  • Likes baking cakes and bread/pizzas with me
  • Her clothes still have characters like Stitch and Barbie on
  • Her glasses are Crayola with a rainbow pattern on the side
  • Her hearing aids are Blue one side and Pink the other (her choice)
  • Her chosen extra curricular are Guides (Girlguides) and Choir – she could do more than 2 but chooses not to
  • Still believes in Santa (although I plan to tell her the truth in the summer before she goes to secondary school)
  • Starting to get into makeup for parties, discos at school etc. but doesn’t want it for general wear yet

ExH thinks she should be into none character clothes, makeup for the full face and skincare, grownup games like trivial pursuit and monopoly. He hasn’t bought her a single toy since she was about 8 saying she’s way too old. He thinks she should be more interested in her phone and tablet (don’t get me wrong she wants to use them and does but never asks to go on them, she’d rather play – the phone is for walking home from school and the tablet we take to appointments with us). He thinks her glasses need to be upgraded to designer labels so she “fits in” with her friends and her hearing aids should be changed to be less babyish. He thinks her activities should also be more grown up and has suggested Gymnastics and a language Class (She turned her nose up at Gymnastics and says she’s learning French at school so doesn’t want to do anymore yet, her potential secondary school offer French, Spanish, Mandarin and German as Extra Curriculars so she can always pick them up there – I am happy to pay for these if school ask me to)

For Christmas he bought her a TV for her room there and a playstation 5 with a couple of age 12 games as she’s “too old for toys now” which she says she isn’t really bothered by and wants to spend more time with me so she can play. When asked why age 12 games he said anything for age 7 up and younger seemed “babyish”.

For Christmas I got her some barbies, a bit more Lego (she has loads of the stuff), a few soft toys (including a dancing stitch thing that she would take absolutely everywhere with her if given the chance) and some clothes.

ExH thinks he ideal day out should be a grown up 12 or 15 movie followed by a meal at an Indian restaurant. Whereas I took her to the circus and out for pizza after during October Half Term and she still acts out her favourite bits of the circus with her toys now.

Don’t get me wrong, she’s not a fussy eater at all, eats most things but she will reject an entire meal still if she so much as sniffs the foods she doesn’t like and spicy is one of her things she doesn't like (anything spicy, even a tiny bit of onion can be too spicy). She also is very grown up in other areas. She very quickly mastered tying her school tie, always check she has her pin badges for school and guides on her uniform (and with guides makes sure they're in the correct place and can move them herself if they're not), sews her own badges onto her guides uniform (but can't do her camp blanket herself yet), she brushes her own hair (i still help her tie it up and wash it), cleans and looks after her own glasses and hearing aids, will take our dog on a short walk alone locally (unfamiliar areas or longer walks she still wants me with her), can feed the dog and knows to check her water bowl and refill it without me reminding her, will walk herself to Guides (but has to have an adult pick her up due to end time - which is fair enough), walks home from school 3 nights a week with her friends, makes her own bed in the morning etc. so she isn't by any means held back.

She does have a minor speech delay as well as hearing issues which need aids. She also has had glasses since age 3. School have absolutely no concerns about her, say she’s bang on academically in most subjects (it’s things which are more wordy like English and things requiring balance like PE she struggles in, she takes her aids out for PE so that is probably why). Audiology and ENT have never raised any concerns at all about her emotional age.

Does my DD sound normal for her age?

As I type this she’s emptying the lego box to make a rescue centre for abandoned animals, chattering away about what pieces she wants and why.

ExH says this isn't normal and i need to encourage more grownup activities for her. ExH has DD for 2 nights EOWend, no extra (his own choice) and DD is both of ours only child but ExH has neices and nephews where I don't so don't know whether I am just not used to knowing what is normal.

Vote:
YANBU - DD sounds normal for her age
YABU - DD sounds a bit babied/young for her age

OP posts:
nicknamehelp · 11/01/2025 18:19

Sounds normal will probably all change when she goes to High School
My dd is 18 still has a room of stuffed toys and has pink sparkling ear molds on hearing aids.

HolyPeaches · 11/01/2025 18:20

ExH thinks she should be into none character clothes, makeup for the full face and skincare

This is DISTURBING 😳

NameChangedOfc · 11/01/2025 18:20

She sounds absolutely lovely, OP. Enjoy her beautiful childhood while it lasts. I honestly can't understand the rush of your ExH: why would he want her daughter to grow up faster than she should?!

ETA: agree with the previous poster! (I also had misunderstood and thought it was your husband, not your ex: good riddance!)

F1rugby23 · 11/01/2025 18:21

She's fine, she has years and years ahead of her to be a grown up. Your ex sounds like could make her feel ashamed about her interests which is sad.

I got sent to boarding school at 9 and loved barbie and baby dolls at the time, but couldn't take them and would never admit to liking them as one girl took a doll and everyone teased her. However, I loved playing with them in the hols until i was older.

Crazybaby123 · 11/01/2025 18:21

Some adults like toys, lots of adults are into things like cosplay (I don't mean sexual I mean the comic con and reenactment stuff), lots of adults are into arts and crafts, lots of crestive people are into dress up and fashion, many many adults are into lego. I think she just sounds like a very creative person. People that are into these types of things tend to gravitate towards creatjve industries. I mean, think of all the jobs that are literally adults doing this stuff as a paid job, costume designer for Disney on Ice, makeup artists, fashion designers, the people that make and design toys and dolls. Even playing with dolls and reinacting scenes, what do actors do, exactly that. There is literally nothing wrong this. I think for a non creative person a creative mindset is just like another universe and it is hard to understand which is probably the issue your husband has.

Disasterclass · 11/01/2025 18:22

I know a few parents who are anxious about their kids fitting in so end up giving access to things that are for older kids. That's obviously their decision, but actually loads of kids are interested in playing for a long time.

OP, your DD may well change when she goes to secondary school, so enjoy this time! My DD was into imaginative play at this age, still needed some help with hair washing etc but these things don't last forever, and DD changed as she got older. At 14 now she doesn't access TikTok but neither do her friends so she's not 'left out'

wastingtimeonhere · 11/01/2025 18:25

She sounds lovely, let her develop at her own pace. Your ex is a dick.
DD had a jelly and ice cream, party games birthday..for her 16th! 😂 Still played with toys way beyond 10!!
Even my sons played with toys up to 12/13 easily. We ran a youth group when our kids were young, older kids than our own..they volunteered to look after our lot so they could play with our kids toys! They were 11-16 yr olds.

EdithBond · 11/01/2025 18:29

Crazybaby123 · 11/01/2025 18:21

Some adults like toys, lots of adults are into things like cosplay (I don't mean sexual I mean the comic con and reenactment stuff), lots of adults are into arts and crafts, lots of crestive people are into dress up and fashion, many many adults are into lego. I think she just sounds like a very creative person. People that are into these types of things tend to gravitate towards creatjve industries. I mean, think of all the jobs that are literally adults doing this stuff as a paid job, costume designer for Disney on Ice, makeup artists, fashion designers, the people that make and design toys and dolls. Even playing with dolls and reinacting scenes, what do actors do, exactly that. There is literally nothing wrong this. I think for a non creative person a creative mindset is just like another universe and it is hard to understand which is probably the issue your husband has.

Edited

100% agree. Alexander McQueen (Lee as he was called then) used to draw clothes at school.

And most professions require creativity and problem-solving to excel, including business, science etc. Some digital games (e.g. Minecraft) encourage creativity. But you’re still limited to the confines of the game. Really creative people make up their own games.

Notjustabrunette · 11/01/2025 18:34

I haven’t read all the replies, but I have a daughter the same age. She doesn’t play will dolls anymore, but I don’t think that is an issue. She does play with Lego, uno etc, all types of board games. When she plays with friends they build forts, make up dances/songs etc.
I would say my kids play online games too much and is an uphill battle to get them to do other things, I would much prefer her to play role play/ imaginative play games.

SemperIdem · 11/01/2025 18:35

She sounds absolutely fine, and lovely. Her interests will change in their own time as she gets older, though some current ones may well remain. There are plenty of adults who have those interests. Creative people are not “childish”.

Your ex is obviously motivated for her to fit in by his own poor experience at school, but your daughter sounds happy and confident, there is no reason to think she would have a similarly poor experience. Nor is there a reason to think she won’t fit in exactly as she is with a group of friends, who may well share her interests too.

user1471538283 · 11/01/2025 18:40

She's perfect! You don't baby her you let her have her own interests.

I really don't like this forcing children into becoming young adults.

Orland0 · 11/01/2025 18:41

BlueberryShortcakePixie · 11/01/2025 16:31

Omg childhood is so short, let her enjoy all that stuff before the iphone/make up shite comes along.

This ^^^

Tell your ex to let her finish being a child at her own pace, she’ll be a teenager soon enough! 🤨

Mnetcurious · 11/01/2025 18:41

It’s the age where some girls in y6 are dressing like teenagers and watching 15s (inappropriate in my opinion) but others are still playing with dolls and dressing like they did as an 8 year old. Both are normal. There’s nothing wrong with your daughter and I err on the side of keeping them young for as long as possible - there’s plenty of time to grow up and childhood is over so quickly.

BogRollBOGOF · 11/01/2025 18:45

Crazybaby123 · 11/01/2025 18:21

Some adults like toys, lots of adults are into things like cosplay (I don't mean sexual I mean the comic con and reenactment stuff), lots of adults are into arts and crafts, lots of crestive people are into dress up and fashion, many many adults are into lego. I think she just sounds like a very creative person. People that are into these types of things tend to gravitate towards creatjve industries. I mean, think of all the jobs that are literally adults doing this stuff as a paid job, costume designer for Disney on Ice, makeup artists, fashion designers, the people that make and design toys and dolls. Even playing with dolls and reinacting scenes, what do actors do, exactly that. There is literally nothing wrong this. I think for a non creative person a creative mindset is just like another universe and it is hard to understand which is probably the issue your husband has.

Edited

And how many women give up their hobbies and interests in adulthood then find that there is a substantial gap in their lives. Male interests are far less discouraged. Few would blink at DSs' 14th birthday presents being an 18+ substantial Lego collector's model or Warhammer.

Girls retaining their hobbies, creativity and sense of play is important. There's a lifetime ahead for adulthood, there's no rush to prematurely end childhood.

Tash had lovely sparkly co-ordinated covers on her hearing aid/ implant on Strictly.

As to concerns about potential bullying, the quickest thing that bullies sniff out is insincerity. It's often worse to play at worldly wiselyness and be out of your depth than to just be yourself.

Rocksaltrita · 11/01/2025 18:46

She sounds lovely but young. I’d be concerned about her going up to high school and not being very worldly wise, though. She’ll just become a target for bullies if she’s talking about Barbies and all the other girls are talking about Sol de Janeiro and Pandora bracelets/whatever the latest trend is.

Peaceandquietandacuppa · 11/01/2025 18:48

She sounds brilliant and I believe she will be a way more interesting and well-rounded adult than a lot of her peers just staring at a games console or phone for hours! Maybe she will work in something creative.

Ex-H sounds like a controlling twat .

Whoarethoseguys · 11/01/2025 18:48

Your husband sounds as though he wants her to grow up too soon. Children are not children for long.
She certainly doesn't need to be wearing full make up and watching films and playing games that are too old for her
She sounds absolutely fine.

wizzywig · 11/01/2025 18:49

She sounds fab op! Loads of fun.

Maray1967 · 11/01/2025 18:53

Can your idiot Ex explain why the ideal cinema trip for a ten year old is to a 15 rated film?

Or why a ten year old should have a full face of makeup on? What the hell?

MrsSunshine2b · 11/01/2025 18:53

Why on earth would ExDH want her to stop playing with real toys...and move straight to playing on screens? I would consider Guides more "grown-up" than gymnastics tbh, and I've never heard of anyone under 50 being enthusiastic about a language class.

DD sounds a bit young for her age- especially the handing babies to adults and giving them instructions- and I can understand wanting her to be independent, have age appropriate interests and show emotional maturity as she gets older. But playing on a Playstation and obsessing over appearance is not maturity.

MabelsBeats · 11/01/2025 18:54

Your DD is completely normal, my 10 year old DD also loves her cuddly toys, Barbies, etc, and is just starting to show an interest in skincare, prompted by friends being interested in skincare and speaking about it.

Childhood is so short. Extend it as long as possible, they’ll never be little girls again.

Your ex can get in the bin. Why is he interested in her growing up faster than is normal and faster than she wants to? Weird.

tootiredtoocare · 11/01/2025 18:54

She sounds fab. A great imagination and as happy in her own company as with friends, she will be self resilient and I bet a lot more capable than other kids as she ages. As long as she's getting as much social contact as she gets playing at home she'll be fine. Let her be a child until it's time to be an adult. You'll probably find that when she gets to high school she'll grow up quite a bit, but please don't let Ex stop her being her fab little self.

christmaslatte · 11/01/2025 18:55

YANBU and DH needs to have word with himself.

She's going to have a long time being an adult, she should be allowed to enjoy being a child and growing up at her own pace.

FWIW, DD was still into childish toys like dolls houses and teddies at 10. At approaching 12, she's becoming more teenagery and she and her friends are more into playing computer games and chatting with each other on WhatsApp.

However she still has a mountain of teddies and sometimes she and her friends still play more childish make believe games occasionally and I think it's MAGICAL to see they can still play! I'm angry on your DD's behalf that your ex is trying to squash this in her.

As for make up and skin care, honestly how dare any adult - especially and adult man - try to force this on a child, it's encouraging them to buy into insecurity about their looks IMO.

Have faith in your instincts OP, you're right!

Vaxtable · 11/01/2025 18:56

Your ex is a twat

she sounds like any normal 10 year old and I would just let her continue. If he wants her to act differently when she is with him then he navigates it with her

You carry on as you are and just ignore him

Itdoesntmatteranyway · 11/01/2025 18:56

Are you worried she is ND?
(I wouldn’t be, any issues surrounding nuance can probably be explained by hearing).
10/15 years ago you wouldn’t be having this conversation. Your daughter sounds 10, just not a sexualised, tik tok 10. That is a good thing.
Trust your instincts. She’s fine.
If, in the future, she says she wants to spend less time with her dad? Listen to her.