It was bound to happen. My son fell in love with Pokemon. To the extent that he didn’t blink when he had to spend 4100 sats on a Pokemon trading card.
The Law of Attraction worked in his favour yesterday. My colleague gave me this Pokemon toy.
I’m not into Pokemon, but I practically skipped my way to the childcare center because I knew my boy would be ecstatic. Given the popularity of Pokemon Go around the world, the collocation bring home the bacon could have been modified to bring home the Pokemon for a modern adaptation. This must have been what cavemen from prehistoric times have felt like when they lugged carcasses to their families.
My son was thrilled. He jumped up and down with joy.
During dinner, he requested to speak to his grandpa over video call. My father-in-law used to play Pokemon Go compulsively; he boasts an encyclopaedic knowledge of Pokemon characters.
My son spoke in rapid-fire Japanese about his joy over getting this unexpected toy. Then, he asked his grandpa, “Do you know what this character is in English?”
My father-in-law confessed that he didn’t know.
“Charizard,” my son - the linguistic bridger - said confidently.
I sat in awe, admiring my five-year-old son who not only handles both Japanese and English adequately, but is able to share with others what he knows. I think he might be able to survive in this VUCA world.
Superb! Your son is definitely going to rule the VUCA world. He knows Japaneese, English and ? He is already very talented. I wish him a bright future.
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and Chinese!
Thanks for the well wishes.
You speak Hindi and English?
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I'm also a multilingual. Yes I peak Hindi and English, then I also can speak a bit of Gujrati, Marathi and Rajasthani but the main is that I'm learning to speak Spanish. Gracias and Chao sttuff! Haha.
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48 sats \ 1 reply \ @grayruby 22h
Amazing. I hope your son has and maintains a wonderful relationship with his grandparents. I take my daughter to see my parents twice a week.
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It must be a joy to watch them come into their own and interact with grownups, almost like equals
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Yep, they learn both. My son does both and his kids do English, Japanese and Thai. When they learn naturally, it sticks with them, too. They have much better rhythm, intonation and syntax than I have.
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I know a little bit of Thai myself. I think your grandkids are amazing!
I think Thai’s tones are even more difficult to master than Mandarin’s
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