At 5:10am on Friday September 23 2005, Kirin Mattu made his first physical appearance in the world at the healthy weight of seven pounds fourteen ounces. At 1:37am on Thursday April 10 2008, his little brother joined the party, at the 37-week weight of six pounds 4 ounces. And at 12:34am on Wednesday May 4 2011, their little brother joined the party. Keep up with the progress of our lives via my blog.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Peanut butter vs Marmite



I probably don't need to explain the video. A (friendly) battle exists in multicultural households between parents, where each one hopes that their child will favour their own cultural habits. Well, the peanut butter/Marmite debate is a classic of the genre. Watch the video if you want to find out who, for the time being (kids are a notoriously fickle bunch), is in the lead.

More important, I think you will agree, it has been too long since I last updated the blog. In a snapshot, Kirin has been changing and developing so quickly in the past few weeks and months, that is hard to know where to start, so I will continue with the wonders of language development. A friend of mind recently suggested that now was the perfect time to read some Noam Chomsky, to experience the linguistic theory in real life. He's probably right but I haven't yet had time to read Chomsky, so we content ourselves with marvelling that Kirin knows so much more than we adults think they are.

Some recent highlights:
  • Letters - I discovered during a recent reading the literary classic, Dr Seuss's ABC: An Amazing Alphabet Book, that he knows far more of the letters than he was previously letting on. Notable markers included "P" and "Q". We have since starting doing a lot more singing of the ABC song, too.
  • Numbers - He can count to ten, with half decent consistency, in English and Punjabi.
  • Animals - Kirin has been able to identify the usual ones, such as dog, cat, cow, etc., but recently also pointed out a zebra (NB: he pronounces it in an English way).
  • Names - Not only does he know my name is Ravi, he now can also be heard saying "Johanna".
  • Sounds - Someone has taught him what a fart is. Not the most romantic notion that he manages to name anyone who does one, but I suppose it was inevitable.
The moral of the story: it is easy to underestimate, even for fantastically proud parents like us, just how impressive children are and how much they learn.