I think it's because toddlers are constantly finding out how something works or behaves or looks, because everything's new to them. And that's what they do all day, e.g. experimenting what happens when they throw n bh hgdffrtnhzgflikjjuuhjzdasswrt6gtop+ü++ (Guess who experimented here...) .
My kid recently freaked out when his ball didn't roll in the direction he expected - the paving in the garden is very uneven and suddenly the ball he'd been kicking seemed to have a life of its own. He refused to touch the ball - the one that he usually loves playing with - and didn't want to go anywhere near it.
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Date: 2011-04-08 02:07 pm (UTC)I think it's because toddlers are constantly finding out how something works or behaves or looks, because everything's new to them. And that's what they do all day, e.g. experimenting what happens when they throw n bh hgdffrtnhzgflikjjuuhjzdasswrt6gtop+ü++ (Guess who experimented here...)
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My kid recently freaked out when his ball didn't roll in the direction he expected - the paving in the garden is very uneven and suddenly the ball he'd been kicking seemed to have a life of its own. He refused to touch the ball - the one that he usually loves playing with - and didn't want to go anywhere near it.
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