Father Moments

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He tells me he punishes his son by sending him to the “Naughty Corner.” He’s 5. The son, that is. Naughty Corner. I turned that phrase over in my head, like you would an idea you haven’t quite warmed up to. I let it simmer. Naughty Corner. Sounds like a dark corner in a seedy club where men in shiny suits sit with wispy women with dark bony knees. I don’t know, man. I don’t know if that’s where I want to send my child.

“So yes,” he pressed on, “ when he becomes unruly, when he’s acting up, I make him stand at the corner, and face the wall.”

“For how many days?” I asked, almost afraid of the answer.

“Half an hour tops,” he said. “Then I send him straight to bed.” He sipped his Tusker Malt proudly, like he had just solved a major delinquency conundrum.

“Do you send him to bed hungry?”

He laughed. “ No, of course not, don’t be silly, I offer him an orange.” I grinned.

We sat there in silence as we cringed at the sight of the deejay sipping Snapp. Which is a bit like watching an old woman floss her teeth.

Finally, I told him, “When that boy grows up, he will kill you in your sleep, be sure of that.”

He chuckled.

I was asking because I have reached a point where I can’t seem to discipline my daughter. Or rather, I don’t know how to discipline her. I mean spanking is out of the question because I heard it can turn your daughter into one of those girls who demand their boyfriends to spunk them when they become young adults (again, stuff you will hear from fathers in bars).

The other day she refused to go to bed, and instead stretched out on my couch (MY couch!) and pulled a duvet to her face like she pays rent around there. Like she was waiting to watch Hard Talk on BBC. The house help tried to shoo her to bed with little success, then the missus tried with the same result. So she came into the bedroom where I was reading a magazine and said, “Please go ask her to go to bed.”

So I put on my best James Earl Jones voice (“This, is CNN,” remember him?) and shouted from the bedroom, “Tamms, go to bed!” You could almost hear the bats outside flatter from trees and neighborhood dogs whimper in fear. But not her. Not my Tamms. She ignored me. She just continued pressing the remote with her tiny thumb with chipped nail polish.

At that point I had a few options: walk into the living room and water-board her, Guantanamo style. Or grab her by her tiny legs and dangle her out on the balcony until she is emptied of the vegetables, rice and minced meat she had for dinner. I read somewhere that at that age (4) kids need “firm loving” (I know) so I did what any sane father left with little options would do; I begged her.

“But I’m not sleepy!” she whined.

“It’s late, Tamms, and tomorrow is

school, you need to sleep!” I whined back, “don’t you want to grow tall?”

“No.”

“If you don’t go to sleep now you won’t be my friend.”

“Mummy is my friend.”

“No she isn’t.” I said.

“Yes, she is.”

“No, she isn’t.”

“Yes, she is.”

“No, she isn’t.”

“Yes, she is.”

“No she isn’t.”

“Yes, she is.”

I stared at her, coldly. She ignored me.

“Please go to bed, it’s late. Please?”

She turned in her seat and looked at the clock above, “I will go when the small is at 12 and the big is at 2,” [small being the minute hand and big being the hour hand]

“That’s 2am.”

“Yes,” she said like she knew what 2am was.

“ Come on, get up,” I said more firmly, struggling with my cool.

She was adamant, I got pissed off, so I switched off the television, switched it off from the power socket then grabbed the remote control from her hands before she could hide them behind her back. She stared at me with horror, like I had just called her fat. Then I repeated one last time that she needed to go to bed. Her lips started trembling, but she didn’t move a muscle…OK, not counting her lip muscles.

So I then– and listen to this genius – I switched off the living room lights and walked out and closed the door, leaving her there in pitch darkness. I heard her break into a cry back there in darkness. I heard the house help console her. Then I thought I heard her say, “ I always knew he was not my father.” Someone giggled. The missus.

In the morning I woke up to cold treatment. Very cold treatment. When I chimed a “good morning!” she stared right through me, like I was mist in Kinungi. Normally when we are leaving the house, she insists that I carry her and her school bag to the car. Not this time, hell hath no fury like a woman left in darkness; she quickly trod ahead of me, and quickly scampered down the staircase just in case I was deluded enough to think she would allow me to lay my hands on her. Or her beloved pink school bag.

I bet if I had listened closely I would have heard her cussing under her breath; “ what kind of a self respecting father switches off all the lights and leaves his own child in darkness to be tormented by ghosts and then eaten by wild animals? His own flesh and blood! I’m better off in a children’s home. In fact, I will move out…once my piggy bank is full, you wait. Oh, you wait; I’m soooo moving out. I’ve had it with this big fore-headed jackass. I’m tired! Enough! I’m so out of here! I will get out of this dump; get a place of my own where no one will sprain my small tender wrists while wrenching that stupid remote control from my hands. Where I can watch TV all day and all night and nobody will tell me that I have to take Scots Emulsion or those awful green vegetables. Oh, you wait, end month, I’m ghost. Gone, baby, gone! ”

The drive to her school was punctuated by stony silence. My efforts at conversation were thwarted by the back of her head. She looked out the window the whole time, disgusted by my sight. Disgusted by the mere sound of my breathing. At school, when one of her teachers opened the passenger door, she stepped out and walked away without as much as a goodbye (I know who she learned this from.) It kind of hurt me, if you want to know the truth. And I’m not being sissy. At this point, if this was an Indian movie, I would have ran after her, and started singing, and she would have run to the gardens and hid behind a tree and peeked from around it as I sung my dark heart out. Sung like a canary.

But instead, as I watched her walk away swiftly, I thought it would be hilarious if she sort of stumbled on her Bubblegummers and sort of fell on the grass. Not to hurt herself, of course not, but you know, just a soft landing where her dress covers her face, exposing her dreadful purple bikers she always insists on wearing. I think that would be more fun than an Indian movie.

We eventually made up, which meant me kissing her ass and buying her loads of edible stuff. But those moments are many. Those moments of fatherhood and I thought, I would come up with a list of my moments of fatherhood. Both good and bad.

When she hangs from my hand. She likes to hold my right arm with both hands and then her feet off the ground and literally swings on my arm like a monkey. It says she believes in my strength as a father and that informs my strength as a man. It says she can trust me to hold onto her. It says she believes I’m dependable, that I would never let her fall. And it makes her feel safe in an endearingly childish way because in her words, “you are so strong.” Between you and me? That shit really hurts my shoulders!

Sometimes she will ask me to bring her pizza pie, those tasty pies they now sell at Pizza Inn. She will say that in the morning when I drop her off to school, but since I never think she will remember, and since I have a memory of a goldfish, I sometimes forget. And when I walk in through the door, she will ask me, “Did you bring me pissa pie?” (She has never learnt to call it Pizza, it’s always pissa) and I will look blank. I will then suffer through the pain of watching disappointment wash over her face, how her face will fall because she had been thinking about it the whole day. But because she’s a great kid, she will offer me a brave smile; like it’s not a big deal I forgot, like it’s not that important. But I know it is important. At the moment it normally feels to me that I didn’t just forgot to bring pissa pie, I forgot about something more important; I forgot about her. And it kills me.

She sits on the carpet, cross-legged, staring up at the TV. She is totally absorbed in cartoon. So absorbed that the carpet could be burning and she wouldn’t feel it. Now I love it when I’m in the next room and I hear her giggle periodically at something on TV. That innocent giggle; unadulterated, the purest form of glee. That giggle can stay in my head for a long time. If there ever is a soundtrack for fatherhood for me, this sound is it.

She will touch everything and anything in the house, but she knows my laptop is a no-go zone. It’s my shrine. She never touches it, unless I open for her a blank word document and she types stuff on it. I love it because there is a mixture of reverence and fear in her where my laptop is involved. She imagines I would go bananas if she touched it, and yes, it would make me anxious, but at the end of the day it’s just a laptop.

I love when I’m writing on the couch and she comes and squeezes herself next to me and just sits there in silence, watching the screen and not saying nary a word. I love it because I know she mustering the courage to ask me if she can touch the letter “T” for Toy. Or Tamms.

Have you seen a child sit on a chair? With their small feet dangling at the edge? Their small feet swinging in and out like a yoyo? Have you seen? Doesn’t it make you feel that life is great even with all its barbs? Doesn’t that action tell you that everything will be all right, that it’s never that serious? Every time I see a kid do that I get an overwhelming urge to steal them. I’m serious.

She likes purple. It’s her favourite color, when purple is your little girl’s favourite colour you know it will be your favourite colour too somehow, by duress. But purple on hair looks dreadful even if it’s on your favourite girl. Sometimes when she is fresh off the salon and she expects me to notice that her hair is new. But if I’m too slow, she demand to know if I like her hair. I don’t know if gaudy purple braids that look like a deep-sea weed is my thing. But I like where it’s all coming from; her sense of vanity.

There is that moment most mornings when I go down on one knee to tie her school shoelaces. That moment when, while I’m tying the laces, she sort of places her right hand on my head. Like she is blessing me. Like she is according me the greatest honor a father can be accorded. That to me is always makes me tender inside. And at that precise moment when I can feel her tiny hands on the crown of my head, nothing ever can burst that bubble, not even when she quips, “Papa, you don’t have hair here!”

I’d love to hear your moments, gang.

 

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  1. I. h.a.v.e d.i.e.d!!! “….Oh, you wait; I’m soooo moving out. I’ve had it with this big fore-headed jackass”. I so feel you coz it happens to me when Jnr isn’t sleepy. I learnt he relates darkness and bonoko, somehow. When I switch off the sitting room lights and mention that I’ll not be there to del with bonoko, he scatters to his bedroom fast. My father moment is when he reports missus to me for driving “my dad’s car”.

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  2. None, yet. But I’d rather boys. Much less work. I compare raising a boy to planting a bluegum seedling and only checking up on it in the evening to mulch and water it. Daughters? Hardest job on the planet. You appear to insinuate it’s worth the effort? Improbable, not impossible, improbable. I need a lot more convincing.
    Soulful piece, Biko. I like.

    1. You don’t know what you’re wishing for. Boys will reduce you to a nervous wreck. They have absolutely no regard to consequences. If there’s a logical and safe way to do something and and a brainless, extremely dangerous way to do it, they’ll pick the option that involves jumping from the sofa’s headrest to the bookshelf that’s 6 feet away…even if the last 6 times they did that they ended up with at skinned knee, a bump somewhere or a busted lip. Reconsider, man.

      That said, boys are frigging awesome!!!!!

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        1. check this out, mr.mmnjug. (I’m king of links these sides, much like you in media madness haha)
          alissaroberts.hubpages.com/hub/Top-10-Reasons-I-Love-Raising-Boys

          1. Doc,
            I am a mum to a boy. It is nothing close to ‘planting a bluegum seedling and only checking up on it in the evening to mulch and water it’.
            It is more like sititing there, protecting it, loving it, caring for it and praying it grows. It is no mean feat.
            Either way raising any child is not easy, definately not for cowards.

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  3. hahaha am not a father yet but purple, i pray, should never be my daughter’s favourite colour and if it all it makes it on the list, it never should come on the hair. You killed it bro with Tamms cursing down the stairs of how she’ll move out.

  4. You feel that for all the wrong things u’ve ever done, you must have something right to deserve her. Great read. cheers

  5. Sweet.touching. I am surprised she wakes up with bile…mine never remember our “fights” by morning.we wake up friends again 🙂

  6. I’ve had it with this big fore-headed jackass………… Heheheeee, I love this child!

    When i am having an afternoon siesta and she sneaks into my bed for something similar like it (hers is total sleep u know) and places one of her tiny soft hands on top of my sleepy neck. Thats is double lullaby to me.

  7. My mother moments, raising a son, is when he finally falls asleep and he has this totally boyish pose where he is kinda sprawled out, chillin’, like he owns the bed, the house….he looks just like a little man!
    Or when he totally ignores me those first few seconds when I get home from work, because he is upset that i had left him (he is almost 11 months old), then I sing to him one of ‘our’ songs and he gives me a big, brilliant smile, at that moment he forgets that he was supposed to be mad at me..before quickly remembering and going back to a scowl…before eventually thawing and settling down for a feed, then, we are pals again.

  8. Are you sure about that whole spanking issue that is discussed in bars? Loved the part about laying of hands . The picture was also cool. Today’s post was short but sweet.
    Good work, Biko!

  9. Biko, you make me look forward to being a parent. Your fatherhood pieces are my favorite. This was a great read. Tamms really has you wrapped around her little finger huh!

  10. Three thumbs up. The potraits are magic.

    Best moment, when my son wears a sufuria for a shoe and walks down the corridor dragging his foot. Drives my wife insane. Never gets old for me. Or when he jabs his finger up my nose to wake me up (should patent that move. Guaranteed to have you shoot up from bed, no matter how hangovered you might be)

    1. Hahah, and you can hardly do anything to them, it’s about the saying “Never raise your hand to your kids. It leaves your groin unprotected.”

    2. Hahaha what? Who taught him that? I wonder what he will do next when that poke your nose stops working…

      1. An update on this comment: I conceived the month after this comment was posted, September, 2013! Talk of speaking to the universe and the stars are aligned.

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  11. Biko I was so pissed off at you for not being able to sustain the cold war, then I realized that I am operating in the mind of a lady who has never been a mother and for this sole reason does not know what parents are doing wrong for their kids to cling onto them and cry for chocolate in the supermarket yet their is the option of pinching their ears until they are red hot! In my mind, Tamms was smoking from the ears…We got madluv for her!

    You should be relieved though that she has you wrapped up around her finger, she is learning the art and will some day have some man wrapped up around her pinky finger in the same fashion…..whoever his mother is, I hope he is being taught well how to deal with a girl who gets what she wants or “she is moving out in protest!”

  12. Aaaaaaawwwww……thumbs up Biko! Purple is said to be a regal color and after all, she is your little princess, isn’t she?

  13. There’s nothing to add here, this is too fresh. Love the picture you’ve painted of your daughter blessing you. That has just reminded me how much I love being a mum.
    I could never write like you do about your daughter so, I’m thanking you for repping good parents.

  14. here is my list:
    my little man calling me babe
    he is learning to talk and he recently pulled a ‘ni sawa tuu’ when we refused to allow him to watch ben 10. You know we had to give in.
    when he handles his baby bro like an egg, he break my heart
    when he pulls his brother by the hair or lifts him up with his neck….woi, oh i am scared to death!
    My crowning moment- when he prays for all of us #<3 being a mommy#

  15. Biko this is beautiful! Happy Father’s day man, can’t stop smiling. I wish what you have with Tamms for every man that has kids………. It is one of my wishes that we would put in the work as parents….

  16. Haha…headmaster, your vulnerability is very humanizing. And bossman, in case you’re not aware, you’re hopelessly smitten…kinda like the Indians you speak of.

    I’m not a father (atleast I hope not) but anyone would be blessed to have ‘pissa pies’ demanded of him by an agel at the end of the day.

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  17. Sweet. I must admit that fatherhood posts make me have that feeling that am reading Whispers again and the Tamms-Father relationship makes me miss the Whispers-Investment dramas. Am not a father yet so I wont say much on that, even on things I feel might be wrong like bribing your kid to do the right thing or feeling guilty when they think you were wrong & you know you are right. And I love the photo, reminds me of this 1? project am trying to do http://manyalaphotography.wordpress.com/category/1love/

  18. Though I am moment-less at the moment, I can relate to those moments. Each made me smile, especially the sitting on the gigantic chair and the giggling when watching cartoons. Typical melt-your-heart moments I can imagine. And I love purple. It’s the color of royalty. Have you ever seen a wedding reception area or the altar of a church adorned in purple? The beauty simply takes your breath away. No worries though, the hair thing is just a stage.

    My favorite moment with my little cousin is when she pouts. The reason could be envy because her elder sister is getting all the attention or could be because you did not deliver on your ‘pissa’ promises or because you chastised her because of a wrongdoing, then she pouts and it makes you so sad so you start promising the moon and consoling them, and in the end they hug you and you melt away. Makes me happy everytime. Personally, I want 2 daughters. Wouldn’t know what to do with boys, wouldn’t know where to start. A boy needs strict discipline, I would imagine. I’m way too soft. But all in all, kids are precious.

  19. Aaaaaaaaaaaawwwww too sweet… Hope to post my moments in like 5 years.
    Biko you should get yourself those purple shoes guys are wearing nowadays 🙂

  20. Remember ‘Ally McBeal’? Remember instances when bipolar imaginations were acted out? I could almost see yu doing a jig, with a dreamy eyed baby girl! Gyrating your hips like those Indian clowns!

    Boss, yu should write a sitcom… if not a movie, I’d pay good money to watch it (Assuming yu pick actors who can act). And while yu are at it, there are worse things than a girl asking for a spanking from her hubby.. least of which, is a woman who can’t find a husband because she’s spoilt rotten. Find a way to discipline her now or later yu’ll find yourself deep in something that starts with ‘S’ and ends with ‘T’… n’ I’m not talking about salt!

  21. This is so cool so fresh man.
    My moment is i have this feeling my son will be a world class metal rock star,he is obsessed with metal the moment he spots my watch or belt they go straight to his mouth.

  22. If there is a day you will dread it’s the day your kid goes to school and his mates tell him “my father can beat your father” and your kid goes “Yeah? When?” #boys. Long live fatherhood.

  23. Lovely lovely piece Biko! I have to admit that daddy moments always sound oh so shweet! Like that blessing of the bald head. Very funny.

    I love it when my son ‘takes care of mummy’. He loves to carry ‘heavy stuff’, really being a man. He is only six. But the times i treasure most is when we sit idly at some place away from home, or at the beach and just share stuff. Its priceless.

    Its a wonderful being a parent, i can’t even begin to explain how… seeing i am not as gifted as Biko with words.. I wish you all this experience one day..

  24. Cant wait to hear they have decoded the art behind “cha baba na cha mama”…that will be the day..the day that I look forward to!

  25. I L.O.V.E.D the rant down the stairs, totally made my day! 😀
    Children giggling/laughing always makes me want to steal them! I doubt there’s a purer sound.
    I can’t wait to get my own children. 🙂

  26. I love it when you do fatherhood pieces, they are priceless.

    My Moment, when i come home and she hugs me. We started watching barney and friends and they always hug each other at the end so she hugs me right at the top of the stairs and says I love you. #Priceless

  27. hey at least you didn’t punch her and choke her like some person…
    I can only imagine how hard it is to instil discipline in children!

  28. You sound like a very good Daddy, Biko. Myself I’ve never had the chance to spend even ten minutes with a Dad. Man, he just walked out and never glanced back. Now I’m 19 and very mad at him. I’m just thinking up how I could walk up to his big office and make a scene. Clearly, I wouldn’t mind taking a swing at him and punching his face, hard! so he staggered back. After asking Momma what she complained were stinging question’s, she arranged for us to meet when I was 14 years, back in form one. I had hoped he’d be sorry he had walked out on me and look forward to a good relationship. But boy, nothing seemed to register in his face; he’s so emotionless. I wanted to be a son but he was so not ready. And no matter how hard I try, he just can’t come off my mind. I’m an only child, he robbed me off some certain measure of happiness. I hate him yet deep down I think I love him. Either way, he’s such an asshole.

    1. Timo,
      I cannot say i understand what this feels like as i had a very loving father. Let it go. Forgive him, move on. I know it is easier said than done

      I have however found that in life, it is easier to forgive people who hurt you. Carrying ‘it’ around makes it your burden, not his. He is probably somewhere enjoying himself. Let it go. If you have to see a counsellor, please go see one.

  29. Beautiful piece Biko. Makes me want to have kids NOW. Present fathers are a blessing. My sisters and I, – 4 girls total, no brothers – so you can imagine what my father went through but upto this day he tells us he wouldn’t trade that for anything in the world! We loved swinging on my dad’s arms like the little monkeys we were. We’d wait for him after work and 2 by 2 we’d swing for probably 1 hr. As a working woman, I can only imagine how tired he was, but he still accommodated his princesses. This piece brough back wonderful memories.

  30. 5-9 years from now i will be more than enthusiastic to share my father moments with you Biko. You make a great daddy even though some moments of mistakes make you think otherwise.

  31. “Every time I see a kid do that I get an overwhelming urge to steal them. I’m serious.”
    Aaaw

    “But purple on hair looks dreadful even if it’s on your favourite girl”
    Hahaha 😀

    Ni hayo tu kw sasa!

  32. I will move out…once my piggy bank is full, you wait. Oh, you wait; I’m soooo moving out. I’ve had it with this big fore-headed jackass. I’m tired! Enough! I’m so out of here! I will get out of this dump

    hehehe…#DEAD#

  33. Seriously dude, I would love very much to learn how you keep her off your laptop. Mine has a cheery blue diode at the on/off button and the two brats I am currently baby sitting thinks they have the patent for making the blue light disappear.

    I could be typing a particularly ingenious piece of the next meal on the table and kaboof! the two guardians of The Houdini Legacy would be in town proving the lore of their antecedent.

    ‘Duduii!’, the male one will bristle sheepishly at me like I speak the gobbledegooky language of kids as he points at the blank screen.

    ‘Weweee!’the female one screeches like she is more keen to prove a point, the point that they belong to the Houdinis and they know how to disappear things. And how I wish I could disappear them in those moments.

    How I wish…But they are kids right? And the bible says that their angels have direct and unimpeded access to their Father in heaven and I dare not hurt them or screw my face hard enough to shoo them off because they have a bigger protector against bullies like me. And I can only but revel in the miracle of having loveable nuisance around.

    God bless our children

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  34. A lil bit late in reading this, but reminds me of the day my little boy (he was 3 then) infuriated me and i couldn’t contain myself and for the first time ever i smacked him, he didn’t cry the first few seconds, he just looked at me in disbelief then he broke down, he didn’t wail like a child would, he cried like a grown up with a broken heart would. I was lost for words, i didn’t want to apologize coz i knew he would never take me seriously again if i did, so I started explaining to him why what he did annoyed me and he looked at me and said …. wee hata si mama yangu, then he walked off to the father…..OMG!!!! My heart has never been so broken

  35. What a piece! “I will move out…once my piggy bank is full, you wait. Oh, you wait; I’m soooo moving out. I’ve had it with this big fore-headed jackass. I’m tired! Enough! I’m so out of here! I will get out of this dump” so reminds me of my son when I tell him for something he’s done wrong … he he he. The naughty corner thing only works until the age of 5 after that you are headed for chess (and at times close combat). Enjoy the ‘blessing’ for it will disappear soon never to come back. Girls or boys bringing them up is not easy just depends on your mentality. Good Job.

  36. Great piece Biko.
    Missus and I were away for about 10 days serving in Masai-Land. No phones and sunburnt like toast. I finally somehow managed to call home and talk to my girl. She’s 5. She listened to me moan about the remote land and how we missed home. When I finished, She calmly asked, “Anything I can do for you guys?”

  37. You make parenting sound really sweet, sometimes it’s not, but there are those moments when the kids take your breathe away. My daughter 3yrs, if am angry with her or i scold her, she’ll cry, then realize mum is not happy, she’ll come slowly, hold my both cheeks with the tiny hands and go like “Mum sorry, pole mum..umekasirika? nakupenda, pole, nitakuwa good gal” this melts my heart no matter how angry i was. There are many moments, when Sunday morning she’ll wake up early thinking it’s school day and attempt to wake me up..lifting my eyelids literally telling ” Mum amka, ona kuna jua..hahaa

    Excellent red Biko, i want to be a small girl again

    1. Aaaaaaaawwwwwwwww your little girl sounds like an angel:) Makes me want to get a kid like right now……..:)

  38. I think this is gets better as you go along. I haven’t experienced the full parenting knacks yet, but with my nephews, 17 and 12 months respectively, I have this rule “you pinch, I pinch” “you scratch, I pinch” you slap, I slap” and I like it when they do it and have this facial expression expecting whats coming to them… I love it!

  39. my mummy moment for me is when she’s having one of those dreams that have her giggling in her sleep, coupled with the gentle purring! warms my heart and i can sit there all night just watching her, spread out on the bed, at peace!!! those are the moments closest to my heart…cause once she wakes up…the terror begins!!!

  40. My daddy moment: When Rosy [Flower] called me from home. Kiki had just hungurad [crawled] under the gate! DISBELIEF, PRIDE & JOY? He is 2.4 Years! Now the compound resembles the barricades @ the UK embassy.

  41. The best Biko. I have so lol. Tears too. I’m a mom of four girls. A child’s laugh is my all-time favourite thing. Next is a knee hug. Love your writing.

  42. Like many others here, I am #teamfatherhoodposts. This is beautiful.

    My moments as a daughter, when I call up my Dad just to vent. Especially when someone has upset me. My Dad indulges me and we bad mouth the villain until I’m feeling better. The other day he called someone ‘that elderly idiot’ on my account. And all I heard was, ‘I’ve got your back’.

    My moment as a mom, when I see my 5 1/2 year old son standing up for what he believes. The other day I almost went off at him because he was in a fight. When I heard the reason, that the other boy was trying to kiss him, I almost burst with pride 🙂 And the best, when he says ‘I love you mom’. Although he would never say this in the presence of an older male.

  43. My moments are when i get home and my three girls light up. My wife can ignore me, i’ll deal with her later, the other two lasses climb on me like furniture and guide me through the house and how the day went. Always an amazing moment i look forward to.

  44. U are very…how do i put it…sensuous (and not in the sexual way)…its like ur thin skinned. Kids can sense when they can get to you and daughters feel like they can get their ‘papas’ to do anything for them, i know am someone’s daughter. Raising a child is a battle for power, and if she senses ur…weakness…thin skin then she will be in the race for the top seat and it will be even harder to tell her to go to bed. But, what do I know, I don’t even have kids.
    Good read though.

  45. That moment when you get to the door, beat. You open the door, she squeals “daddy!” and runs over, plants a loud “Mwaaa!” on your cheek and asks “How was job?” Fatigue leaves in shame.

    That moment when you get to the door, beat. You open the door, she’s still mad at you from last night’s “Go to bed”. She glances over, looks you up and down, and gets back to Mickey Mouse Playhouse like nothing happened. Pride exits in shame.

    That moment when you’re at the sofa with the missus, she wakes up, walks over and pushes mum’s head from your lap and eyeballs you, “daddy, squeeze” And you have to reluctantly move so she can perch herself between the two of you and resumes Mum’s position, grabs your palm and places it on her shoulder.
    And that’s how we won the war.

    Saturday, she wakes up early, grabs my lower eyelid and my brow, pries them open and face so close I can smell last night’s Colgate Junior, commands “daddy, waaake up! No lazy boy”

    Or the comical, smirk when I proclaim “Please, please finish your vegetables” and she murmurs “mhm, please. please. Are you a princess?”
    Gets me every time.

  46. ive laughed so hard, i heard my ribs cracking. then there’s the sentiment of parenthood; the tears actually bowled over. and you can imagine im sitted on the office desk. i wouldn’t trade in my motherhood for anything. absolutely. biko, you’re such a good writer, i can read you all day but i gotta get back to work

  47. I now somewhat get why people with kids find it hard to leave a crappy marriage.. I guess the thought of missing out on this moments kills them…

    A lovely piece.. Can’t wait to be a mom. 🙂

  48. I don’t have one yet but I’d love my daughter to have comfortable life, with me. Its only right that if your parents grant you a good stay with them. Your kids life should be even better than yours. (Not trying to outdo each other here I think you get my point.)

  49. Hilarious.. I have an 18 year old daughter and she used to be like Tams. She would have thought it was the end of the world to be forced to go to sleep or to be told no… 18 years later, she has turned out to be a brilliant young girl. The secret is as much as we love our kids, provide for structure, consistency and discipline as you love them and have fun with them. They will thank you later!

    Can you write about Missus too?

  50. My fatherhood moments is when my son who is 2 years, runs to the door when he hears me knock. The other day he left his mum with his food as he ran. I feel so proud.

  51. Am not a mother yet but i can’t wait to experience motherhood and parenting.The momens stated above makes it all worth it.I will say that i have experienced a few of them with my niece during sleep overs.

  52. My son is just three months. when he is breastfeeding he grabs one of my fingers so firmly with his small soft hands, gazes straight into my eyes and smilingly coos.

    Nowadays I put him in a carrier and we go for walks/ run errands n he just clings his head on my chest and stares around.

    Also, he wakes up at the middle of the night when am so sleepy n immediately hid eyes lock within he grins n smiles at me so warmly. Sleep just goes out of the window.

    I wouldnt trade these moments for anything else