Toddler Humour

Our daughter got her first joke today. I was listening to her play tea parties in her room with her Mum. The tea pot was being filled to the brim with imaginary steaming hot tea and all the cups and saucers put into place as her soft toy friends arrived one by one and were seated into their allocated positions.

The last soft toy to arrive was Octy the octopus.
“Sorry I am so late to the party” says Octy.” It took me quite a while to put on all my shoes!”
“Octy…” says our daughter. “..Shoes.”
There was a slight pause and then to our complete surprise she says, “Ha ha ha, mummy funny, mummy funny!”

I still can’t believe it myself…

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Potty Training Adventures Part 1

Potty training can be a very interesting time for a dad trying to teach a little girl through
imitation on the potty and subsequently I haven’t stood up to do a pee for ages. It was the ‘poo’ however and not the ‘pee’ that really unraveled our toilet training system.

We were going along really well for a while and even gloating how clever we all were as our daughter had mastered the deaf sign for ‘toilet’ or the potty as we call it (open and closing the hand) by the time she was 12 months old.

Every morning and after every meal we would say “It’s time to go to the potty” and at the same time we would make the sign. She got to know the routine and by the time she was 15 months old she had even done wee wees’ and poo poos’ on the potty. Not all the time mind you but enough to get us pretty excited at the prospect of no nappies.

Well it all came undone with one stupid and careless mistake. We were driving home from an outing one afternoon and about 5 minutes from home she called out, ”Daddy, Daddy”.

I turned around to see what she wanted and she was making the hand signal for the potty. After praising her for being so clever and grown up I explained to her that we were almost home and if she could hang on a little longer then I would take her to the toilet as soon as we got home.

I must have gotten side-tracked or something because when we finally did get home stupid Dad completely forgot about his little girls’ urge. After about 10 minutes she walked past me and I smelt that familiar scent rising like the steam off a freshly baked muffin.

“Oh my goodness sweetheart, Daddy forgot to take you to the potty. Have you done a poo?” I said, marveling at my own stupidity. “No, no, no” she said and ran away from me into another room.

After that I had real trouble getting her onto the change table. She kicked and screamed and cried and I almost had to hold her down to get her nappy off. She actually looked very embarrassed that she had messed her nappy and I think that she thought that it was all her fault.

Poor little thing. Even though I apologized to her and told her that it was all Daddy’s fault and not hers she continues to be a little weird around toilet issues. She doesn’t make the sign anymore and she won’t let us put her on the potty at all and so subsequently we have dropped the whole thing for a while.

We still talk to her about it but we don’t force her to do anything or put any pressure on her about it. I suppose the toilet issue is a sensitive one at any age so if you are going to try to get them started early then you have to be sure you can follow through.

Good one dad. It looks like it’s nappies for a little while longer…

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Should You Spank Your Child?

should you spank your child?There seems to be a very fine line between smacking and abuse that is determined by individual circumstance and culture. What is a simple smack to one person could be considered abuse by another.

Do we trust all parents to know what is right for their own kids?

It is easy to sit back and say that no parent has the right to judge another parents’ way of disciplining their own child. Does that mean that parents can do whatever they like to their kids without any fear of consequence? I wonder if we would say the same thing when serious physical harm or sexual abuse is involved.

Where is the line?

The English word discipline comes from the Latin word to teach. Do we need to teach our kids using pain? The line seems to be drawn around whether or not the parent is in control of the situation. If the parent is in control it is described as discipline, if not, it is abuse.

I do believe that discipline and the setting of boundaries is extremely important in the raising of kids however I do not see the need to physically hurt them. That seems to me to be a complete betrayal of trust. Most of the time there appears to be no malice in the small childs’ behavior but plenty in the parental retribution.

The very small child is probably not even aware of the connection between their behavior and the physical punishment they are receiving and unfortunately toddlers are the ones who receive most of the physical discipline. They could only be wondering “why is this person who loves me hurting me?”

More often than not it is the parents who appear to be out of control when their kids annoy them so much that they have to retaliate with physical violence. You only have to watch and see the parents yelling, screaming and hitting in frustration to see why the kids do it.

It is quite hypocritical really. “How many times do I have to tell you Johnny, don’t hit your sister” Whack, whack, whack. Is this a confusing message or what?

Kids definitely need to be taught right from wrong and cannot be allowed to run riot. I’m not talking about a soft approach to these important matters.

What I am saying is that physical violence towards your kids can only teach them about physical violence. Studies show that a child who is hit by their parents is four times as likely to hit their siblings.

Physical violence can also create a silent rift between parent and child that can destroy trust and closeness in this very important relationship.

The other point worth noting is that kids really do become immune to spankings after a while. The parents then feel the need to spank harder and harder to get the message across and before you can say ‘catholic priest’ a light spanking has turned into serious abuse.

In this day and age with all the advancements in psychology and teaching techniques it seems ludicrous to me to still try to teach our kids using pain as a motivator.  We don’t even do that to animals anymore.

To teach a dog to do tricks we now use rewards and positive reinforcement not a whack with a stick. All modern studies have shown that this is a much more effective and respectful way to teach. Why should we treat our own children with less respect than that?

No pain but plenty of gain….

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