Overheard in a Target:
Little girl: But I want the Yoda! The Yoda!
Mom: But you donโt want that one. Thatโs not the one for you.
Little girl: But the Yoda! I want the Yoda for my basket!
Mom: Thatโs not the theme and thatโs not what weโre doing.
Little girl: The Yoda! The Yoda! I want the Yoda!
Mom: Quit complaining. Weโre not getting the Yoda!
Little girl, being led away: But I want the Yoda! Yoda! Yoda!
The context was more clear in person โ it was pretty apparent that the woman did not want her daughter to get something โunfeminineโ like Yoda, that it was the wrong choice for a girl.
The conversation actually went on for a lot longer โ about seven or eight minutes of the girl begging for some sort of Yoda thing for her Easter basket and being repeatedly denied and forced to make another choice.
Sexism is real and it exists; much of it also perpetrated by women against other women and even worse mentally-defenseless little girls, as no one is immune to and insulated from the patriarchal environment in which we all live.
Yoda’s in the current Star Wars? Or was it Maz Kanata?
It seems like her mother was trying to perform a Jedi mind trick on the girl. Later the mother will wonder why the girl has no interest in the toys in her Easter basket.
I sidestepped a lot of this, mainly because it was a different time and my mother’s way of being a girl wasn’t exactly like our neighbor’s, but when she kept telling me I really wanted one thing when I didn’t, I just remember being very confused.
Yoda wasn’t in the new film — guessing the little girl had seen the older ones, though it wasn’t probably shown to her by her mother I’ll bet.