With a knick-knack, paddy whack, Give a dog a bone, This old man came rolling home. This old man, he played three, He played knick-knack on my knee. This old man, he played four, He played knick-knack on my door. With a knick-knack, paddy whack, Give a dog a bone,.

This Old Man (Knick-knack Paddy-whack) | Nursery Rhymes ...


This Old Man - Wikipedia
Like most humans, I was indoctrinated into the cult of nursery rhymes at an early age. Their easy language and catchy hooks get lodged in your brain instantly, but for the most part, these songs lay dormant in some neuron storage facility toward the back of my hippocampus until I had a child of my own. As I dutifully sang these songs with my daughter to uphold one of the many tenets in the parent-child contract, I started to notice that some of these songs are really, really strange -- subversive, even. At the very least, creepy as fuck. Naturally, being a high-powered investigative journalist, I scoured weird old British texts courtesy of the Victorian-era British Society for Nursery Rhyme Reform , read through NPR radio transcripts, and combed through weird subreddits in an effort to uncover the hidden meaning behind a few of the most popular nursery rhymes.
"Three Blind Mice"
Many others have asked the same question in the past so you may want to find those and read the responses there. That one I haven't asked him about yet though since I feel like it would be a little presumptuous and might seem like I'm rushing things commitment-wise. Tough to say what will impact your girl most - but there's your best LDS. At least I know that there are people who truly understand the medical life.
I would go ahead and make boundaries with the conversation about kids and church, if that is your preference. I have a small child home full time with me, millions of miles away from any family. I visit him every month, we managed to go on weekend trips when he's off and he's spend all his vacay time with me and his family.