Right now Tim is going through one of those stages of development that I will later fondly remember – because it’s over. Let’s just call it the “fart phase”, that seems to be a part of every child's lengthy language acquisition process. Any rapper on the streets of Berlin is an aesthete compared to my son.
Tim clambers across my legs in bed in the morning, happily shouting “helloo, farty pants!” But I’m not “farty pants” – I’m his father, which I tell him. Not surprisingly he’s also got a special creation for his mother… Most of his word creations are based on bodily openings and excretory processes. This is not nice.
Why can’t he make up nice nicknames, ones we’d like to hear? Why can’t I just be “top dad”? I asked his Kindergarten teacher about it and she said it is normal. Undaunted, I decided to counter my son’s behaviour by dishing out punishments for bad language when necessary.
Unfortunately however, I lack authority. I’m not very good at punishing. Not to mention that a psychologist once explained to me that small children simply don’t understand punishment. It doesn’t work, and applying sanctions is much harder on the parents than the children, especially if the punishment includes a ban on television. Would you still stick to that ban at eight o'clock on a Sunday morning?
No? Well then. I decided to tread a little more carefully in the future.