Read what our little munchkins say on various topics. You may be in for a surprise with their innocence. Does your little one also end up saying something funny or random? It's your chance to share it for other parents to exclaim Look who's talking!
Little ones
Baby Name: Parent's Name: Geeta Kalle
My 2(1/2
My 'Hi-tech' 2 year old
Baby Name: Khushi Parent's Name: Swati Srivastava
My 2 years old (2yrs and 3mths) daughter Khushi is very smart and ya 'hi-tech'. She don't like to play with anything thats not electronic and her favourite is my LAPTOP. She knew how to start and shut down the computer when she was 1 1/2 yrs old. Now she knows how to open WORD, POWER-POINT, MY PICTURES etc... Whenever we have guests she is the one to open and show her pictures and videos. One day she was doing something on the computer while I was not there. When I came I saw internet was not wo
The Marrying Man
Baby Name: Parent's Name: Bharati Gopalani
I have a 10 year old daughter and a 4 year old son. One evening my cousin came to visit us, with her pretty two year old daughter. I introduced her to my children, saying, “This is your new little sister.” My son retorted, “If all the girls will be my sister, then who will I marry?”
Crow and the Pitcher
Baby Name: Parent's Name: Ashwini M N
When my daughter was a year round, she had the habit of picking dirty pebbles off the road. To break this habit, I had told her that the pebbles would be dirty as the stray dogs would have peed on them. After 3 months of telling her this, her habit broke off. When she was a 1.5 yrs old, during a noon nap, she wanted a story. I started with the smart crow that drank water from a pitcher by dropping pebbles into it. The moment I finished the story, my daughter made a face and said "Dirty crow touc
Sandese aathe hain
Baby Name: Parent's Name: Usha Pavan
My two and a half year old son saw a Sikh with a turban for the first time in a shopping place and was so excited and started singing Sandese aathe hai. This is because he saw the movie border and he liked the song. From then onwards I couldn't stop my son singing that song when ever he sees a Sikh with a turban. It happened once in a lift in my husband's work place, and we both were expecting that this boy would sing the song seeing my husband's Sikh collegue in turban and were thinking how to