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Fantasy
toy brainwashed my child - mother cries for vengeance.
It's not easy being a parent. Just ask Mrs Nystedt.
It used to be that all you had to worry about was simple things
like drive by shootings, under-age drug pushers, and putting your
precious little muppet down for a good private school.
Now it seems, you also have to worry about the toys you give them
too.
Mrs Nystedt bought a Tirblee - one of the legions of cheap furry
electronic toys available for sale in the Far East - for her 14
month-old daughter, Nancy, while she was traveling in Hong Kong.
"I bought it for her to help her sleep at night," said
Mrs Nystedt. "It said on the packaging that it spoke Tirbleese,
and was voice activated. Initially, it worked very well with Nancy.
When see woke up and started crying, the Tirblee would open its
eyes, its stomach fur would light up green, and it would start making
these funny noises, words like 'splimpmeebot' and 'schnoo mitee'.
Sometimes it would start shaking and singing a song."
"The funny words would calm Nancy down almost immediately,"
Mrs Nystedt recalled. "So I was very happy. It worked a lot
better than a night light I had bought a couple of months previously."
"The first thing I knew about the problem was when I was taken
aside by a lady working at my daughter's nursery when Nancy was
about 20 months. The girls were being helped by the staff to make
one of the children a birthday card, and Nancy started making these
funny noises."
"The nursery wanted to know if I was multilingual and was
I trying to help my daughter speak a second language? I didn't have
a clue about what they were talking about, as neither I or my husband
can speak any other languages."
"When we got home that evening my daughter started talking
nonsense to me and I recognized the words as Tirbleese, the same
made-up language the Tirblee talked."
"It's a nightmare," Mrs Nystedt complained. "Nancy
now refuses to speak anything apart from Tirbleese. I had to get
a friend in Hong Kong to travel to China to buy me the little dictionary
that came with the toy, as I had thrown ours away."
"The only way I can understand what Nancy is saying is to
look the words up in the book. I must be the only mother in the
world who can now speak fluent Tirbleese. I try to never speak it
to Nancy, though, as this would just reinforce the problem."
"Her father is furious. Before I bought the wretched toy,
Nancy had just learnt to say da-da - now she calls him 'rocklot',
which is Tirbleese for papa."
Mrs Nystedt has investigated suing the company, but was advised
that since the manufacturer was based in China and has since ceased
trading, the chances of her making a successful claim are almost
zero.
Oh well. Happy Christmas anyway, to Nancy and the Nystedts. Or
should we say 'Glink Mecomee'?
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OTHER CONTENT - January 2001

Next
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Jennifer Swann. 01/01/2001
I think it's very sad parents buy their children toys that need
batteries at all. What ever happened to getting them something that'll
stretch their imagination rather than just act as a pacifier?
Charles Stringer.
01/01/2001
Glad you're not my mom!
Dan Pretzlik. 01/01/2001
Charles, she IS your mom.
Tim McMunger. 01/01/2001
Lego MindStorm has batteries, and I can think of nothing better
to stretch your children's abilities. Ditto
buying them a PC. Get with the 21st Century, lassie.
Lucy Olsen. 02/01/2001
And if you believed *this* story, I've got
a nice piece of land ....
Ed. 03/01/2001
Quite obviously, an alien culture is preparing
to enslave our planet and they are using these 'furbie/turbie' creatures
to teach the next generation of children their language so that
they can interpret the alien's commands. The 'factory' in China
shut down as soon as Mrs Nystedt and other concerned parents were
on to them(rather suspect don't you think?). I'm being very serious
here people, for the sake of our species, stop buying the bloody
things!!
Silver. 06/01/2001
Sounds like she was getting more feedback
from the toy than from her parents, so no wonder she wanted to be
more like it than them. Kids pick up whatever language they hear
at that age so if she heard more tirbleese than english it's hardly
surprising.
WNivek77. 02/02/2001
This was the best humor I've read all week.
I must admit all my old fantasy toys like Star Wars and such brainwashed
me at an early age. It's sad but true,but they seemed to have helped
influence me to want to be an intelligent, creative free thinking
individual who never wants to stop learning, not recreate past mistakes
and never be part of the herd. And shoot tiny plastic missiles at
people. I'm blessd to have been able to have such influences, I
guess.
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