My 10-month-old baby has a new cry.
He’s not crying because he’s hungry. He’s not crying because he’s cold. He’s not crying because he’s in pain, or needs his nappy changed or the computer cord he loves nibbling has been deliberately placed outside of his reach.
He’s crying because he wants attention and he’s figured out that howling is an awfully effective way of getting just that.
It’s not a ‘real’ cry, you see. They’re counterfeit tears. A highly accurate imitation of the real thing.
And here’s where it gets tricky. Because from the other side of the kitchen, or down the hallway from his bedroom, I can’t actually tell whether the noise is bona fide or simply a cry for attention.
"Ignore it. They just want attention" is a much-uttered phrase of parents everywhere and has been since the dawn of time (or at least the dawn of the toddler). But more recently, the same label is increasingly being applied to the actions of adults, specifically, adult women.
Rebecca Onion wrote for Slate earlier this month about two very public instances where adult women were effectively silenced and dismissed by men labelling them as 'attention seeking".
Donald Trump's political campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, was caught on film groping a political reporter and physically forcing her away from the presidential candidate.
When she - quite rightly - complained, Lewandowski tweeted that she was "an attention seeker". Rapper Chris Brown recently accused singer Kehlani of faking a suicide attempt - "there is no attempting suicide" he said - suggesting that she was simply seeking attention by “flexing for the [Insta]gram.”