My son.
He’s three years-old and still can’t say his own name. In fact, he can say “Mummy”, “Daddy” and, wait for it, “Sweets” - and that’s about it. He is vaguely potty-trained. That’s to say, he’ll do it when he wants and he regularly mistakes cotton pants for a nappy.
Let’s get this right though - I’m not bashing him. This kid is capable of acts of total (bordering on criminal) ingenuity:
HE’S THE KING OF YOUTUBE
This started as a way of keeping him calm on car journeys. We’d give him our Google Nexus or iPhone with NOW TV, Netflix and Flixster apps so he can stream kids movies, or those we’ve downloaded for him. Annoyingly however, he mostly plumps for toy unboxing vids (in Russian, Chinese and more) on YouTube. If not this, it’s vids of grown men in Lycra clad Spider-Man costumes hoovering or washing dishes.

What’s impressive is not what he watches, but how he finds them. I can ask him to find a road safety video from the 1970s and he’ll disappear into the corner to figure it out. He obviously can’t spell so how does he manage to find it?! I truly am raising a genius.
HE’S FLUENT IN KOREAN
At least we think its Korean. Maybe it’s Punjabi… Or it could be Swahili? Whatever it is, he’s completely fluent and is flat-out frustrated that we can’t understand him. He’ll shout it at you and over-pronounce much like a foreign waiter and his dad and I are regularly left open-mouthed saying “Whaaaaaat?”… maybe it’s all those YouTube vids.
HE CAN SCALE A STAIR GATE
The naughty step is lost on Dexter and no bars can contain this criminal mastermind. If he’s on a time-out in his room, you can almost hear his brain working overtime as he formulates an escape plan. Even if you remove his table and chairs and other lightweight furniture, he’ll find a way of creating a step high enough for him to fling his leg over the stair gate. Clothes, duvets and even his baby sister have all been used to this end.
HE CAN OUTWIT SLEEP
Most kids have surprised us by fighting sleep and trying our patience at bedtimes, but Dexter’s skills are even more impressive. This kid has actually set his body clock to wake at 1.05am every night. He’ll then grab his Spider-Man pillow and creep silently into our room. Every morning we wake up to a slumbering tot beside us and wonder when and how he got there. The Sleepbot app on our iPhones have since given up his secrets.
HE’S A SELFIE EXTRAORDINAIRE
Nuff said.

HE PARENTS HIS SISTER
I don’t need any help parenting Heidi. She’s pretty simple to look after and needs only a unending procession of fruit and milk to keep her in line. She’s a positively angelic baby and a simple “No, not that / there” will see her come tottering back to you from breakables, plugs or cupboards on Bambi legs. She’ll head straight back to mummy to hear the rationale behind it and appears to take it all in.
So I don’t need any help parenting Heidi, but I regularly get it in the form of Dexter. She doesn’t even have to do anything wrong to earn a clip round the ear, or quick drag across the carpet. Her biggest crimes seem to be pinching chicken nuggets from his plate, wanting a cuddle with Mummy when Dexter fancies one himself or having the audacity to want to play with her own toys.
HE CAN FAKE A HEADACHE
You see, I thought this was a real skill that most women perfect after a few years of marriage to ward off their husband’s advances. I’m pretty good at this myself. You squint your eyes a little and grab at your hairline where it borders your forehead. Toss in a couple of well-timed sighs and your other half is sending you to bed with a glass of water and two Nurofen. I use this regularly to get out of sex, bathing the kids or doing the washing up.
Although Dexter’s motivations are different (his are to convince Mummy & Daddy to let him fall asleep on the sofa rather than his bed, to dodge vegetables at dinner, or to get carried home from the corner shop) he can have you believing he has a brain tumor in seconds. He deserves an BAFTA for his efforts.
There you have it. These are just 7 of Dexter’s extraordinary talents - there are so many more. I know most of us think we have mini geniuses at home, but I truly believe I’m raising the next Mark Zuckerberg.
