I used to roll my eyes when I heard parents desperately beseeching
their children to “use their words.” I naively thought that my own children would
possess the wherewithal to verbalize their requests in a dignified manner. Not
that I have children, I find myself using that phrase constantly. It is
difficult to describe the frustration of having a wailing child make a beeping
noise while pointing at the sky. Especially when you find out they simply
wanted some goldfish crackers. My son has his own vocabulary. A sampling
appears below:
Dyedoor - This loosely translated to dinosaur but is
applicable to any unknown carnivore with displayed teeth.
Hiyah – This is an affirmative response to an inquiry.
Tee – This refers to a television or computer monitor.
Babbaww – This gender-neutral designation is reserved for
grandparents.
Mahpad – This refers to any electronic tablet within his
field of vision and implies immediate ownership.
Ahfrye – This either refers to a breaded or fried entrée but
can also mean Chick-Fil-A
Ting – This is a request for someone to sing to him, usually
a ploy to prolong the bedtime process.
Eehhur – He has sustained an injury
Toddlers are uniquely frustrating in that they will speak
perfectly vivid King’s English one moment while resorting to grunts and noises
the next. Within a span of 45 minutes my son clearly requested that I “sit down
on the slide” and then proceeded to answer the next several inquiries about his
day with fart noises. Our son sometimes prefers a series of high-pitched
screeches emitted at random intervals. The cumulative effect is that if someone
were to eavesdrop on our home it would sound as if we were attempting to reason
with a bird of prey.
Son, it is time to put our pajamas on.KUK-KAW KUK-KAW AAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!
Sometimes he will just scream until he can be reasonably
certain that he has triggered a migraine in either himself or a neighbor. Once
finished, he will briefly make eye contact before beginning again. This has to
be torturous on his throat and every now and then he goes hoarse from it. Once I
just looked at him and resolved to see how long he would continue until he got
tired of it. I still do not know the answer to that question.
There is one word that is always crystal clear: NO. I read in
one of the parenting books that if you child begins saying “no” before saying
“yes” you have not provided them a safe and proper environment. I suppose the
idea is that your home should be so incompatible with mischief that you spend
your days encouraging their behavior instead of discouraging it. That may have merit if you are attempting to
raise two year-olds in an abandoned shipyard, but I maintain that any toddler
worth their salt can find an effective way to injure themselves even in the
most kid-friendly settings.
I have yet to meet a parent who devotes their entire day to
encouraging a toddler’s chosen behavior. Mostly because their toddler wouldn’t
survive. It is difficult to avoid negative language when danger is involved, “I
like your passion with that cheese-grater Timmy, and it speaks volumes that you
are the first person to re-purpose it as a place to defecate!” I suppose the people this parenting book
refer to (who must reside in “toddlertopias”) just occasionally glance up from
their novels and say, “Way to take the initiative sweetie!”
In my best moments, I sympathize with the foreign concept of
attempting to verbalize one’s desires and emotions in a language that is
difficult to grasp. At other times, I am almost convinced that he is doing it
on purpose. No reasonable person of any age can really believe that pantomiming
a horseback ride while screeching conveys a need for ice water.
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