Originally Posted by Batty67:
My son's first word was "ball."
My son's was too! And by far the most repeated (the only real contender..."why?").
Funny story: my son was very determined and persistent. If he was crawling off to some place or thing we didn't want him to go to, we would pick him up and move him to another room. This had worked for his older sister; she would forget about whatever she had been doing, and become absorbed in her new surroundings. Not true for my son. No matter where we put him, he would doggedly try to get back to whatever had originally drawn his interest.
Trying to figure out how to deal with this, I stumbled upon the ONLY thing that distracted him and made him change task: I put him down in front of a baseball game on TV. He would watch that for hours...upside down. Problem solved...as long as it was baseball season and there was a game on TV. That was when I knew he had inherited the passion for the game (from his mother as well as me), but at that point, I didn't know if it would go beyond that.
Flash forward about a year. Son is about 18 months, maybe 2 years old. We're at the zoo in Seattle, celebrating the birthday of a boy who was a friend of his sister's. All the boys - who were about twice his age - were playing whiffle tee ball. As soon as there was a break for cake and ice cream, instead of going for the treats, my son lined up in the batter's box (left-handed - woo hoo!) and took a nice little swing and CRUSHED the ball (well, crushed for a two-year-old; he hit it further than the four-year-olds did).
From then on, whiffle ball in the yard was a daily routine (he even suggested we play that Christmas; when I mentioned it was dark and there was six inches of snow on the ground, he looked at me as if to say, "So?"). His favorite thing in the world was to drill dear old Dad with a line drive right to the, uhh, mid-section. Funniest thing in the world to him. I decided I would start throwing whiffle curves at him as a result, but it didn't work. If the pitch fooled him, he'd adjust, flick his wrists and go get it. At the time, that ability to start a swing fooled, adjust, and go get the ball reminded me (for you old-timers) of Jack Clark. THAT was the first time I really said "hmmmmm." After that, there were many times in LL, and later select and even HS ball, but that was the first time.