Tim is currently in a stage of his development that I will remember with affection in the future only because it is over. Let's call it the "fart phase", and it seems to be an unavoidable step in the ongoing process of speech acquisition of every child. Compared to my son, every Berlin rapper is an orator.
In the morning, when Tim scrambles over my legs to reach me in bed, he cries gleefully: "Hallooo fart face." But I am not a fart face. I am a father. And I tell him this. Need I mention that he has also invented a very special name indeed for his mother . . . Most of his new phrases are based on bodily orifices and excretory processes. That is not particularly pleasant.
Why can he not come up with a term of affection that is easy on the ear? Why can I not be simply "flower father"? In response to my enquiries his nursery nurse assured me that this was quite normal. It's all the same to me, so I decided to approach my son's behaviour with courage and, where necessary, to impose punishments for rude words.
Unfortunately I lack the required authority. I am not particularly good at punishing. And besides, a psychologist once explained to me that small children are at a complete loss with punishments. It doesn't improve the situation and parents find it harder than children to adhere to sanctions, especially if we're talking about a television ban. Could you stick to this at, say, eight o'clock on a Sunday morning? No? Well then. I decided to proceed with moderation.