Tim is currently going through a phase which I will probably like to look back on – once it’s over. Let’s call it the ‘poo phase’, one that seems to be part of the gradual process of language acquisition which all kids go through. My son makes an urban rapper sound eloquent.
Every morning when Tim scrambles over my legs to join me in my bed, he greets me with a jolly “Hi there, poo face.” But I’m not a poo face, I’m his dad. As I keep telling him. Needless to say, he has also coined a special term for his mother, too… and most of the words he dreams up seem to be based on bodily orifices and excreta. Not very nice.
Why can’t he think of a more pleasant nickname? Why can’t I be “flower daddy” or something? It’s not uncommon, says the woman at play school when I ask her. But I don’t care what she says; I decided to do something about my son’s behaviour and if need be, to impose punishment for bad language.
The trouble is, I’m not all that big on discipline. I’ve never been very good at meting out punishment. Apart from which, a psychologist once told me that toddlers simply don’t respond to punishment. It doesn’t do any good anyway and forbidding things is harder on the parents than it is on the children, especially when we are talking about television. Do you really want to enforce a ban at eight o’clock on a Sunday morning? Of course not. So I decided to take a softly, softly approach.