Settling squabbles between real brothers and sisters is one of parenting's dark arts.
I bet every parent who's had more than one child knows this for a serious fact of life.
When I say it's a 'dark art', what I mean is that the schisms between real siblings run deep and run complicated.
We parents do our best to settle disputes fairly and with justice and kindness;
"After giving this disagreement careful thought I have come to the conclusion that…"
Then there are the occasions when only one phrase will do:
"Because I say so!"
And this is how tricky it can be even when, as a real parent, you know the combatents inside out and understand all the subtleties and nuance.
Now imagine what it's like to be judge and jury of a couple of foster children you scarcely (by comparison) know!
What happened was this;
We've been joined by a Parent and Child; a teenage mother of a baby who's a few months old.
The mother is learning to parent the baby hands-on, all day and night. And doing it well. Her social worker has asked me to free up an hour and a half every day of "me time", for the mother so she can get her breathe. The mother opted to have from 7.30pm until 9.00pm in front of the telly with a can of Cherry Coke and biscuits.
Fine.
But.
We have 2 telly's downstairs; a big one off the kitchen, and a medium one in the living room.
Our eldest foster child has always had first dibs on the big telly after dark because he likes to cook himself fancy late night snacks while watching stuff.
But, in her early days with us, the young mother begged the big telly for herself citing a bunch of complicated reasons including the fact that there are gaps in the living room curtains that made her feel vulnerable.
We fixed the gaps and asked her to use the living room and give the kitchen area back to our eldest foster child.
The first night, the young mum folded, saying that she'd needed to use the kitchen to prepare some formula milk, but had felt scared to ask our eldest foster child if she could come into the kitchen.
A seriously shy young person.
I'd noticed they'd been a bit standoff-ish with each other, daft of me not to clock there was the germ of a rivalry.
I called the two of them together, but, as is so often the case with today's young, they found it hard to talk.
Then…brainwave!
I got them to exchange phone numbers and agree to message each other about comings and goings in the downstairs when they're both downstairs.
So far it's working even better than I imagined. They are tapping away to each other ten to the dozen. Engaging. Chatting.
I meet countless older people who don't understand what a fantastic tool text messaging and the internet is for empathy and embrace.
They're wrong.
Our kids are right.