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I’m the kind of guy who makes decisions in his digs. I’m clinically decisive. I don’t wobble and fumble about with decisions. I make tough calls all the time. There are no referendums in my house, no mlolongo system, only the Zulu Law, a nifty, leather bound 23-paged handbook on things that fly and things that wont. Yes, martial law. And now I will illustrate how, in my house, my word is law. How everything has to pass through my desk for my nod. You might want to come closer to the screen, Tech Man, you won’t learn this from any gadget.

Here goes.

So last week, I’m sitting in the living room working through my breakfast as I watch TV when suddenly the missus is standing over my juice.

“I hear you are getting a dog,” she says with a phoney show of nonchalance as she straps her wristwatch, getting ready for work.

“Well, look who’s been spending time on my blog,” I say because what I love more than sarcasm in the morning is chapo and eggs fried to submission.

She ignores that quip.

“Well, yes. I’m getting a Rottweiler.”

“I googled that dog, Biko, it doesn’t look nice at all.”

“That’s why I’m getting it. I don’t want a nice dog, I want a dog that won’t take shit from anyone.”

“Do you mind the strong language?”

I raise a hand like a captured Vietcong.

“Look, getting a dog is a bad idea but getting a dog like that is plain ridiculous,” she says, then adds, “Plus, where do you intend to keep a dog like that here?”

“The balcony!” (I can be quite Einstein in my moments)

She sighs. “You know I don’t like dogs. Especially a dog without a tail like that dog.”

“Which is even great because a tailless dog will occupy less space.”

She then lows her voice and speaks to me like she is speaking to a Hernia patient. “No, we are not getting a dog, Biko.”

And that’s it. That dog story dies like that. Open and shut. In case you are wondering which part makes me decisive, in case you missed the most important lesson here, it’s the part where I ceded. Indeed. You got to learn to pick your battles carefully, like a magician picks his hats. Great men don’t get their scruffs dirty over small squabbles. They walk away to fight another day, because bigger battles awaits them. This. Is. Spartaaaaaa!

OK, fine, I lost. Let’s move on.

But seriously, men don’t ask for too much. Our needs are so threadbare, so basic that they should be awarded without commissions having to sit down. Take my household for instance. No infrastructure there speaks to me as Biko. I have lived through five curtain and two carpet changes. I have seen the color of sofas change. I can’t tell you the color of cutlery I will use tomorrow.

The landscape of my house keeps changing so much that I stopped walking in and asking questions like, “Hey, hold up, what happened to the magazine stand at the corner?” or “Wait, has the wall always been lime?” Or “ Who is that Chinese man standing in the corridor?” Or “Do I have to finish my vegetables?”

So the missus will change color and furniture because I dunno, it keeps her balanced. My little girl will get a new potty with a backrest, or a sliding thing, or a bike, or a new fancy cup with Disney pictures, or a colourful poof, hell if she really caused a tantrum that she wants a new father I’m sure he might be hired for one for a week – preferably one who doesn’t whine on his blog. A real father. Everybody gets what they want.

But what does Zulu get (apart from the bills) to stop hair growing on his back? For his balance? What does he get to stop him from holding some hostages in a building along Kenyatta Avenue and screaming, “I swear if, in 30mins, I don’t get a fully fuelled chopper with a 45kgs Rottwelier in it, I will start shaving all the women’s weaves and painting the men’s nails red!

OK. Uhm, know what? Strike out the men’s nail paint part. It’s not consistent to the image of the man who needs a Rott.

All I wanted was a dog. A new showerhead is great, I’m sure, but all Zulu wanted was a dog…without a tail.

(Insert a woolly Sade song here)

***

Today’s post was not supposed to be about my expunging masculinity. But sometimes you write paragraphs in your head and when you see a blank word document, you sort of are inspired to put it all down.

You start a story from it’s midsection, then you put a roof over it’s head by fleshing it out to see how it will read, then, before you know it, the narrative has gained some form and traction. So you let it. And that’s the thing, some stories don’t need you, they don’t need your guidance. They can tell themselves in complete isolation. They are mercurial.

Today’s post was supposed to be about my daughter turning four. And I had a story to tell as an opening gambit. The eve before schools opened, I pitched home at 9.30pm and when I walked in the little girl was seated before the TV. She was sitting about 2 inches away from the screen as usual.

The whole house was dark because everybody had turned in, except her. She had on her night gear; pink trucks, some long flowery nightshirt and a headgear to protect her new spanky hairdo. And then she had these new black Bata shoes on. The whole ensemble was a fashion faux paus. She looked mad. Next to her was her pink new school bag. Nowadays they insist on these new bags that you pull on a roller, like a travelling suitcase.

“Hey, what time is your flight?” I asked her. She ignored me. That’s the thing with televison; it steals your baby away. You don’t stand a chance with Disney Junior. So I take the remote and mute the damned thing. She whines.

Oh by the way, to all parents out there, here is a gem. I have a friend called Janet. She has a 5yr old kid and she is a psychologist, she told me once: Don’t converse with your kid like she is a kid, engage her with grown up conversation because that’s the only way she will develop her speech. Smart, eh? That will be two glasses of wine, thank you.

“Where are you going all dressed up, a date?” I ask.

“I’m going to sleep. What did you bring me?”

I hand her a lollipop.

“Hey, what’s in the bag?” I ask.

“My babies.”

She has two dolls, one is an unsightly brunet with a receding hairline called Vivian and the other is a stuffed doll that happens to be Vivian’s cousin, or mom, depending on what she decides. They go where she goes.

“Ready for school tomorrow?”

“Yes.” (Eye still on TV, muting it doesn’t help.)

“What will you tell Ian if you see him?”

“That papa will cut your ears off.”

“Good, what else?”

“And give the dogs.”

“Now say it in full.”

“What?”

“What will you tell Ian when you see him? Say it again.”

“That Papa will cut off your ears and give the dogs.”

“…and feed it to the dogs.”

“…and feed it to the dogs.”

“Good girl!”

That, gentlemen, is how you send messages to pesky little boys with ideas.

This is how I see these posts about fatherhood. One day she will grow up and read these posts and realise how clueless, challenging and confusing fatherhood was for me, and that hopefully in these posts she will understand and forgive my vivid flaws as a father.

Sometimes to move forward you have to assess where you have been. So I went back to the Fatherhood folder here and spent some time reading through those posts, to take stock. Two things dawned on me; one, how embarrassingly weak my writing was in some posts and two, how quickly things change, that when children change so do you. They transform you. They drag you through a journey, willingly and unwillingly.

In Slices of Fatherhood I describe our inane conversations in the car as I drop her off to school in the morning. Those conversations are more coherent now. Plus, she no longer sits in the back. She rides shotgun, like she ma dawg or somethin’ and we off to roll some joint and shit (always wanted to say that). She knows which CD she wants to listen to in the car, and she knows how to operate the car stereo.

I have a bad habit of driving with one hand (like I’m Ricky Ross) so she will always reach out and hold my left hand. You can’t start understanding how flattering that makes me feel. How it makes my insides all soft.

Now she un-straps her own seatbelt when we get to school I guess it makes her feel grown up. The whole kiss on the cheeks when she is disembarking went and it was replaced by a kiss on the lips. What are the rules against kissing your daughter on the lips? One day I saw a teacher look at me weirdly when I kissed her on the lips and I wanted to say, “hey, she is my kid, I swear.”

You know Gary Oldman? No? He’s a B-List actor. In a recent interview, when asked how fatherhood was for him, he said “There is no handbook for parenting, so you walk a fine line as a parent because you are always civilizing these raw things.” I liked that; civilizing these raw things.

He meant, you – as a father – is always recreating. Always processing your actions using unique and new situations.

Before writing this piece, I made two lists. One how great I am as a father and the other how I suck as a father. The Suck list was longer…and more interesting. But I realised that all the points on why I sucked stemmed from one character flaw I posses; I’m grossly impatient!

I’m a testy chap. I’m impatient with people and I’m impatient with myself. I don’t wait. I don’t do queues very well. I hate people who bloody don’t keep time. I have a rule; if it’s a chic; I will wait for 30mins max then bust. If it’s a guy, 15mins, unless he’s bringing me money, of which I will wait until dusk. Tsk.

But fatherhood is always testing your patience. Children are always testing you. Here is a scenario. Tamms has to wear shoes, because we have to leave the house. Like many chicks, she has many shoes. So she stands before this shelf and stares at this colourful shoe derby. I stand patiently behind her, like a peasant, because my duty in her Kingdom is to help her wear whichever shoes she picks. Problem is she stands there until I start growing a moustache. She is oblivious of the time. But she’s my baby, and I’m a peasant. So I wait.

“Can I wear the pink shoes?”

“Yes, sweetheart.”

“No. I want the white shoes.”

“Okay, the white shoes look great.”

She picks the white shoes but then changes her mind and picks the black shoes with these little diamonds on them. I like those shoes better than the tacky pink shoes. But peasants only offer their opinion when asked, so I shush.

“I want these black shoes.”

“I loove those black shoes.”

“They look nice?”

“Yes, they look nice, now here, let me help you.”

She doesn’t make a move to put the shoes down, instead she says “ Do you like the pink shoes?”

“Yes, I love the pink shoes too.”

“And the purple shoes?”

“Yes, baby, I love the purple shoes. I love all your shoes.”

“Me I like the white shoes and the purple shoes.”

“Me too.”

“What is your favourite color?” she asks.

“I like purple,” I say, but only because purple is her favourite color. I’m sneaky like that.

“Noooo,” she laughs, “I like purple, you, you like black.”

“Why, ‘coz I’m black?”

She doesn’t get the joke, obviously.

“We are running late. You want to wear which shoes?”

While holding her black shoes she stares at the red shoes. I slowly start counting from 100. I mean, I can’t spend my adult life picking size 29 shoes.

She puts back the black shoes and picks the red shoes.

“Do you like these ones?”

God, give me strength. “Yes.”

“But they don’t have shinings!” (That’s diamonds, for you all.)

“Then wear the black shoes, Tamms!” I hiss and she looks at me sharply. The thing with kids is that they will pick the most distant aggression in your voice. I immediately feel lousy when she puts down the red shoes. Shit, now I have to kiss her ass.

“Are you sure you want to wear the red shoes, baby?” I ask sweetly, all of a sudden feeling like I have all the time in the world to pick shoes.

“Yes,” she pouts.

“You don’t want the black shoes? Look, they have shining.”

She is stares at the black shoes like they don’t belong to her.

“Who loves toto?” I ask her. That’s always my way of saying I’m sorry. She ignores me. Then time for helping her with her shoes; I kneel down to help her, she holds my head and she puts her right foot in the left shoe, so I tell her it’s the wrong way and she takes her left foot and puts it in the right shoe. This happens three times and I get so exasperated I want to Dracula her ankle.

Another thing, on patience. Fathers are advised to play with their kids no matter how foolish the game is. People who advice that have obviously not played The Horse, a game I detest with all my heart. In The Horse someone goes down on their knees and someone rides on their back. The Horse, unfortunately, is always me. I never get to ride on her back. It’s unfair! Try going back home at 9pm, tired as a mule, and then try carrying a 15kgs blubbering weight on your back and tell me how you feel about your knees and your back after. Go ahead. Tell me if you don’t think horses are stupid when you see one.

This post has gone 400 words over the 2,000 mark, so I will drop anchor here. But not before I share some important parenting tip that I ran into recently.

“Never raise your hand at your children, it leaves your groin unprotected.” Red Button.

[Photo credit: Flickr]

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      1. I’m with you on that one Bikoz. Peops like us (meaning dudes that don’t bother with the details past point A) think it’s okay to keep dogs on the balcony…and imagine the dog will clean up after itself. Wives have to swallow the urge to stick a fist down your throat. The desire to ram their foot up where the sun don’t shine. The itch to bleed your ears with a ear-drum splitting yell..and calmly say with finality, “That shit don’t fly, hon”. S’why we married them. To stop us when we’re running on ill-conceived dreams.

        1. I second her on the No vote though for different reasons. A rottweiler has a larger than life personality. To accommodate it on a balcony would be a real shame. It needs a home with proper grounds; backyard, front lawn where it can strut its stuff. Gary Oldman has never been a B list actor. Check out Leon, Batman begins & Dark knight. Nothing B list about them.

      2. This one I have to reply! It’s always gr8 reading ur posts. Eeh, Missus is very easy n happy-go-lucky 🙂 pass my regards to ur gals

  1. And by the way, where would you have kept the dog?

    This post was so like Tamms. I could see her all over! Great Post Biko

  2. “That Papa will cut off your ears and give the dogs.”

    “…and feed it to the dogs.”

    “…and feed it to the dogs.”

    “Good girl!”

    HATE SPEECH!

    Tamms is very likeable by the way……ok. From what i’ve read.

  3. Biko Biko,

    “Never raise your hand at your children, it leaves your groin unprotected.” Red Button.And cut the month is on that shity corner where its taking the 93 degree turn but this article ryt here will keep me going till check day.

    Ati “in case you missed the most important lesson here, it’s the part where I ceded”Dead.
    Jeez Biko you killed me today.

  4. “Which is even great because a tailless dog will occupy less space.”<<< Hehehe! And you wonder why she said NO, eiy?

    Happy birthday to Tamms, they grow up so fast. 🙂

  5. Kept giggling like a teenager in the office. This was really funny.

    A round of applause to the Missus for winning the battle. Dont worry, we can work out an arrangement where the gang hides Mufasa for you and the Missus will never know. Besides its more animal friendly than the Balcony.

    Parenthood changes you……. FACT. Funny thing is that as a parent, we seem to learn more from our children than what we teach them. As for Tamms, Happy birthday and God’s blessings upon her. Oh poor Ian……

  6. This right here put the hugest smile on my face. “Never raise your hand at your children, it leaves your groin unprotected.”

    Happy belated birthday Tamms.

  7. About seven months from now i’m getting my own. I’m praying for a daughter. Then at some point I might get to have an ‘Ian nemesis’. And probably buy a smith’n wesson.

    Nice read Zulu….

  8. poor Ian, you do know you will scar the boy for life???? now every time he will try to ask a girl out all he will hear is” papa will cut ur ears and feed it to the dogs!”

  9. You know those things one is reading or watching and suddenly one realizes you’ve been smiling the whole time? well this was it today..haha especially at the beginning when you’re describing Zulu law. And the fin, “..leaves your groin unprotected” #dead. Good stuff Biko.

  10. Excellent writing as always………Try getting a Pom Pom (Pomeranian) I am sure the Missus will love it. Between I am an avid reader and follows you silently…..Happy Birthday Tamms!

  11. Great read Biko! All i can say is that i want a kid he he he ……………..That stuff about choosing which shoes to wear is hilarious.

    Tell Tamms that project44 wishes her a Happy Birthday ! she will grow into a fine Eve i am sure.

  12. If it’s a guy, 15mins, unless he’s bringing me money, of which I will wait until dusk. ( This is the wrong way of saying it, it makes one sound low. Put it like this ” If money and a certain guy are coming together I’ll wait till dusk – mercurial, ain’t it (love using that word) ). Good day Biko.

  13. One day I saw a teacher look at me weirdly when I kissed her on the lips and I wanted to say, “hey, she is my kid, I swear.” You’re the funniest bugger I’ve read about. Have an awesome week.

  14. I like this missus..she doesn’t lose, and i can envision her strapping her wrist watch and saying in a whisper that you are not getting a dog…hahaa. I love Tamms even more, she’s tasteful, picking shoes is every gals nightmare and if she has started it now, she’ll be a pro when she get’s older.
    You make Fatherhood sound really interesting, someone should write such a piece about motherhood. Great read Biko, this has made my day…am still smilling.. Happy birthday Tamms.

  15. waaah! Biko I got thrown out of a meeting. u made my week Biko! I can’t wish 4 the horses but wish to be Tamms in my next world.

  16. i spent time with 2 lovely nieces this past weekend and it was such a friggin workout! Good piece…has taught some of us future daddies and husbands a thing or two about both tasks…coz i bet they are!

  17. My 6yr old daughter comes running home..momma momma that boy said he wants to kiss me..cutting tongues,cutting ears its combat i tell ya!

  18. they grow up so fast! A big dog is a good investment!
    Oh and Gary Oldman is not B- list- Commissioner Gordon in the Dark Knight.

  19. Happy Birthday Tamms. Hilarious piece Biko especially the shoe picking conversation. Its every girls’ nightmare, shoe picking…

  20. Your taste in a tail-less dog is telling! I mean, who wants to see the tail folded before the story changes? Hehehe. So much for Zulu Law!

  21. Wise guy… knowing which battles to cede. The ‘shoe talk’ with Tamms quite telling of the ilk of fathers you belong. I bet she and missus are quite proud of you!.
    A great read .

  22. My plan for a Rottweiller went much easier. We kinda need it.

    You can always try again in a few months/years. Keep the hope up.

    I hate the horse too! Great Read.

  23. my bro asked advice on what to do with my niece’s future suitors..now i know what to tell him lol..
    Good read as usual..misus sounds pleasant actually n id like a daughter like tamms someday…

  24. “Try going back home at 9pm, tired as a mule, and then try carrying a 15kgs blubbering weight on your back and tell me how you feel about your knees and your back after….” 😀

    Enjoy them while they last. You will miss these horse rides one day.

  25. haahaaa, you must be the smartest of the male species – and you will be happier trust me without that Rott living in your balcony 🙂 the perfect Sade song for the interlude: King of Sorrow!!
    Children are a blessing that one day grow up and ‘fly’ away…. enjoy all the little things now, there will come a time when Tamms wouldn’t care that you do like her in her black shoes with shinnings..and Happy Birthday to Her!!

  26. Lovely read!i scroll through the comments every week and i always wonder wat makes you reply 1 comment and not the next

  27. I have a daughter so I feel you..choices, choices, why does it have to be the routine every morning when we are running late? Happy Birthday to Tamms! She has a great daddy! ..keep writing Biko, nimezoea my monday fix!

  28. You went off on a strange tangent at the beginning ,Biko. good quote at the end. My namesake shall be forgotten,its puppy love on Tamm’s part.

  29. Now this was an enjoyable read…….and you don’t ever want to win against the missus. I once won a minor tiff, I will never make such a stupid mistake again.

  30. Hilarious! As a stylish super aunt(self-proclaimed), I relish in spoiling my niece rotten! My brother in law is impatient and does not always appreciate that she has so much(clothes and shoes) to chose from courtesy of me. It makes sunday mornings hectic , he says!
    You sound like a great father, don’t beat yourself down. And about the tailess Dog, the missus got my vote! Won’t it be harder for the dog to communicate without a tail? Isn’t that the way they express themselves?

  31. You made parenting seem… somewhat un-ghastly. I grudgingly agree with your wife’s stand coz the balcony would definitely cramp a Rottweiler’s style. You might have to wait until you have a backyard so that the mutt can run characteristically amok.

  32. Great read Biko!You made me call my father and ask him if i had a shoe picking problem when i was younger!He confirmed that he went thru it from when I was 3 till i moved out!He still keeps the shoes that cost him the most as evidence for his future grandchildren!
    Get ready coz its just the begining!Jus avoid shoe shopping!Happy Birthday to Tamms!

  33. Hehehe Biko *DEAD!* There seem to be a girl power in zululand. The trick is not to blink! Happy birthday Tamms. Always makes my Mondays!

  34. Boss, there are things I’m grateful for in life.. One being, that I’ve lived to see greats; I’ve seen Michael Jordan magically handling the basket ball, I’ve been enchanted by Samuel L Jackson as he dished out script, I’ve shed a tear from a serenade of Shai,’ Tupac. I’ve been given a new lease on life under inspiring summons of Joel Ousteen. I won’t mention Cynthera here.. that was a different life.

    I’m grateful I’ve read this piece.. words so beautifully put together. That, n’ your blog.

  35. Hope the little angel had a great time on her birthday, she is so adorable! am picturing her in her night gear on and bata black shoes on……….hahahhahahh

    Pole sana for losing the battle on having a Rottweiler maybe missus will have different sentiments for a japanese Shikoku…..rymes with Bikozulu (kinda) and everybody can call her Shiko…….cute……

  36. Exquisite work. Your little girl will definitely enjoy this when the time comes.
    And there is great strength in a man who can back down. Good for you! Thanks for the great read too

  37. Biko, do you know what that man will be thinking of you when he gets to eighteen? Do you want to know? Well lets start by the pimples on his face and love for plant leaves that when set on fire produce intoxicating smokes…right now, he is the one kneeling and you want to cut off his ears…sixteen years to come… you will be growing white hair and he will be going to the gym… think about it and withdraw your message to Ian…

      1. Hahaha…the commission is safe for now…Great piece though. Trouble is here with me;this lady who sits next to me in the office thinks there is something on her face like a white man peeping from her nose coz I can’t seem to stop stiffling laughter.

  38. Excellent read! Laughed through the 2,000 words plus. Just a little advise. It’s Rick (without a y) Ross = Rick Ross or Rozay. You only say Ricky when you put it together with Rozay = Ricky Rozay.Just thought to correct you before Tamms does.

  39. You can have all the dogs you want. Unrelated, just don’t stack old tires at the balcony or behind some door. The reason they’re not on the car in the first place is that they’re worn out and completely un-usable. Oh, and the huge speakers from the previous system? We won’t be needing those either.

  40. coming to think of it..you shouldnt cut of ian’s ears..coz then he wont hear your future threats…literally..and before i forget..while playing horse..a man that desires to own a rott should never ever think of riding at the back..

  41. Ahoy! It doesn’t matter how well you shave today, you’ll still have to do it tomorrow..I say pick a Mach 3 and good aftershave! Congratulations on doing it for 4 years now….PS: picturing Tamms in headgear is kinda funny in a cute way

  42. you’d wait till dusk for some one bringing you money,,now thats funny, unfortunately for me, i actually did that once, bloke never showed n seeing as it the guy had requested i be taking my drinks on bill, his to settle when he comes, nearly got thrown into the kitchen to do those dishes or is to chonga viazi…thats besides the topic, all i wanted to say is your doing a better job than most.

  43. Hey Sir J.B,

    I once read somewhere that, “Being a great father is like shaving. No matter how good you shaved today, you have to do it again tomorrow.”

    The way I see it Biko is that you are an awesome dad (in the real sense of the word) and Tams is blessed to have you in her life. Granted, fathers have their own fears which more often than not are justifiable, you need to allow yourself to relax a tad, blink once in a while and keep at relishing the little things that make life (read fatherhood) magical. I just can’t help but get the impression that you are being rather hard on yourself.

    This however was a great read, undeniably eloquent, sweet and refreshing. Thank you for writing Sir.

    From me this side of the sahara, Happy Birthday to your baby girl Tams.

    Bless you and have yourself a good one this week. Cheers!

  44. Sweet, gives me nostalgic memories of Whispers, Thatcher, Investment, Whisper Mobile etc back in the day. The way the family posts come out make me feel that Whispers has been reborn, a Whispers of our generation ( though you sound older than I )! Keep it up.

  45. Biko this post was quite fun to read especially the part about your daughter. She sounds so much like a young version of you….very intelligent and funny. The advise from Janet is very true and I have proof of it. My sister has a son who is 6 years going onto 13. He has always held discussions like a grown up since the mother communicates with him in a mature manner. His confidence is above average and makes kids his age look really bad.

  46. “King of Sorrow – Sade” inserted very woolly and apt indeed. Humor and food for thought to keep us goin till next week as usual. enjoy your week Biko

  47. I do look forward to Mondays Biko because I read you with a lot of dedication. I however seemed to have enjoyed your posts most last year and mostly in the beginning…posts like Knickers, Women, The Airport Scene, The lawyer you accidentally hit, the Uganda trip and your Landlord were funny engaging and I could read them a dozen times and feel as though it’s always the first time. You need to get that energy and inspiration back, since am told by one of my writer friends that one only gets better in the writing world.

  48. I love the way you love Tamms. Don’t stop. She’ll grow up a confident girl if you invest in her. Don’t stop. Eeh, i have a son, and he’s not called Ian :-). Happy birthday Tamms.

  49. @MDM, you want to read about a car? Seriously? Lets’s just hope it’s not about the Vitz he once wrote about driving. It’s not something worth writing or reading about.

  50. I will not say what I think of fathers who want to ride on their daughter’s backs. Hehe. You are doing a great job at being a father. Too bad I can’t get Tamms a birthday present.

  51. Tamms adorable little missy…the missus..the one who asks you to jump and you ask how high 🙂 no dog in the balcony….”especially a dog without a tail like that dog” hilarious.

  52. My daughter is the same age as your daughter! And it seems they were born the same month – Jan ’09. This parenting thing-we are all just figuring it out. But for all its worth, you sound like a great father.
    I love your missus. This sounds exactly like the kind of exchange I would have with my poor hubby, lol.
    Love your blog by the way. You write beautifully.

  53. Ha ha ha. This has killed me….Zulu Law..Martial Law..clinically decisive… then No, we’re not getting a dog Biko. I’d have loved to see the look on your face!!!

    I’m so glad i “discovered” this blog. I’m hooked!

  54. “One day she will grow up and read these posts”

    That shouldn’t worry you much Biko. But what SHOULD worry you is that One day she will grow up and WRITE her own blog and like all normal kids she will be at least twice as good as you. I personally can’t wait for that day. It’s one of the reasons I pray for long life!!

  55. Read this blog about daughters and thought of your articles about Tams.
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bret-spears/10-things-no-one-ever-told-me-about-having-a-daughter_b_5745710.html

  56. I love and relate to every piece you do here about Tamms, thing is i have my own daughter, a very sweet 3 year old plus. She’s merciless too. Goes to show these things and experiences are universal. “Treasure those moments, they don’t last long” a wise man once told me.