Kids, babies, cubs, kittens or whatever you like to call the offspring, all have  one thing in common. They love to play. So I think we can safely assume that  caveman kids played. But with what did they play with.
    What amused the minds of our ancestor's kids when they were lying around the  fire after a hard day learning about staying alive. We are still trying to work  out the minor details of the past lives of children of prehistory, but we can  dream. 
    Anyway, were the first jigsaw puzzles just leaves that had been ripped up into  little pieces so the little ones could put them back together. Was this a  teaching aid so the kids could learn which plants were safe to eat. We will  possible never know but it is good to ponder.
    Back in prehistory before houses and cars and TVs, video games and all the  modern gadgets that we have nowadays. What toys did caveman kids play with, when  daddy was out hunting the mighty mammoth or giant sloth. And mommy was gathering  vegetables and herbs and grasses and whatever else they ate back then.
     Anyway many artifacts have been dug up, mostly bone and rock carving of people  and wild animals. Beautiful carvings, something to be really proud of. Don't you  think that maybe, just maybe, it might have been made by a dotting daddy for his  little son.
    In the future when future man digs up what we leave behind, what conclusions  will they come to. Looking at some of the dinosaur toys available, would they  conclude that these beasts actually walked among the skyscrapers.
    In the 25th century if you dug up an old car toy that hadn't rusted away, how  would you explain it.
    Would you say it was some sort of God that we worshiped, or was it a decorative  item we used to show power. It could have been a model of the king's chariot,  but do we stop to think that it may have been something for our kids to play  with, while we were out making more money to buy even more things for our kids  to play with.
    We have war games with tiny toy soldiers and cowboy and Indian sets. What is to  stop the tiny carved human figures from prehistory being toys to teach the kids  the best way to hunt down a mammoth or rhino or deer.
    If we made some replica models of some of the artifacts, and gave them to our  kids to play with in the sand pit. We might see them reenacting a mammoth hunt  or chasing a wild deer into the ground.
    Some of the most valuable artifacts would suddenly be delegated from God status  to kid status.
I like to look at what we do now and them dream about what  could have happened in the caveman days.
    Nowadays in any toyshop there is a shelf of toy plastic animals. Anything we see  in the wild or on the farm or in the home is there in little packets.
    Did the caveman kids also have collections of toys. Now, our kids even have toy  cavemen to play with, so what did caveman kids play with.
    I can remember Fred Flintstone on TV but did  Pebbles and BamBam have any  toys. All I can remember is  BamBam running around with this big club. Now you  can buy big air-filled clubs and hammers that don’t hurt when they hit you on  the head.
    But back to reality, kids love to play and caveman kids would also have played,  but with what.
Toy bows and arrows and toy spears. Like kids today who  love anything to do with war. Would all the spear points belong to daddy's  toolbox or would the smaller ones belong to the son.
    They must have had something to play with, but with what.
    Maybe in the future someone scratching around in a long forgotten cave will  unearth the  Barbie prototype. Or the lovely bird carved from a long dead mammoth  tusk just might have been from mummy to daughter. And not some elegantly carved  offering to an unknown God.
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