Father-of-three Davy Nguyen weighs in on controversial topic on why he has a ‘favourite child’

Dad-of-three uses ‘favourite child’ system in which his daughters compete for ‘top spot’ with chores and homework

  • A doting father-of-three, from Sydney, has revealed why he has a ‘favourite child’
  • Davy Nguyen has three daughters, Angelique, 20, Trinity, 18, and Siobhan, 14
  • He said he picks a favourite child – but his preference changes regularly

An Australian father has revealed how acknowledging a ‘favourite child’ every month encourages his three daughters to excel.

Davy Nguyen, from Sydney, has been using a ‘favourite child system’ in his home for the past 10 years on his three daughters – Angelique, now aged 20, Trinity, 18, and Siobhan, 14.

To earn the top spot, the ‘competitive’ sisters must do their homework or assignments, ‘study harder’, and help their parents around the house with chores and cooking.

Appearing in a SBS Insight episode about ‘favourite children’, Mr Nguyen said he explicitly has a favourite child – but his preference changes every week or month.

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A father-of-three has been using a 'favourite child system' in his home for the past 10 years on his daughters - Angelique (right), now aged 20, Trinity (centre), 18, and Siobhan (left), 14

A father-of-three has been using a 'favourite child system' in his home for the past 10 years on his daughters - Angelique (right), now aged 20, Trinity (centre), 18, and Siobhan (left), 14

A father-of-three has been using a ‘favourite child system’ in his home for the past 10 years on his daughters – Angelique (right), now aged 20, Trinity (centre), 18, and Siobhan (left), 14

Poll

Do you have a favourite child?

  • Yes 6 votes
  • No 17 votes

Now share your opinion

‘Favouritism to me is a good thing. There’s nothing wrong with having a favourite child. At the end of the day, I want to show them resilience,’ Mr Nguyen explained. 

‘A lot of people say “having a favourite child is actually a negative thing” but I look at it as a positive thing because if they’re good at something, then you should acknowledge that, we reward them for that.

‘And if they’re not good at something, then obviously they’re going to go down to the bottom of the list of my favourite child.’

Mr Nguyen said his daughters have an option to ‘slowly work their way back up’ to become his favourite child for a particular week or month.

‘For them to get back up the ladder again, they need to work harder, do more chores around the house, do more fantastic cooking,’ he said.

The dad said his child would lose that top status if she was spending too much time on social media, back chatting, not doing homework or helping around with chores. 

‘Therefore they will slowly go back to the bottom,’ he explained. 

Davy Nguyen (pictured) said he explicitly has a favourite child - but his preference changes every week or month

Davy Nguyen (pictured) said he explicitly has a favourite child - but his preference changes every week or month

Davy Nguyen (pictured) said he explicitly has a favourite child – but his preference changes every week or month

According to an Australian study, 69 per cent of parents can ‘easily’ identify a favourite child – but most can agree they will never openly admit who it is.

‘If every parent in Australia is telling us they don’t have a favourite child, they are lying to us because we do have a favourite child,’ Mr Nguyen said.

‘But in my household, each child is my favourite for that particular week or that particular month.

‘Every parent has a favourite but they just don’t want to tell their child.’

Speaking to his daughters around the dinner table, Mr Nguyen said: ‘I’m very balanced. You’re all my favourite every single week.’

If every parent in Australia is telling us they don’t have a favourite child, they are lying to us because we do have a favourite child

His wife Sandra insists she doesn’t have a favourite child because she loves her three daughters equally – but Mr Nguyen joked: ‘That’s bollocks.’

Despite his favouritism, his three daughters – who all believe they are his favourite child but for different reasons – said his system works for them because it has shaped them into much better people.

Parenting counsellor Maggie Dent described Mr Nguyen’s system as a ‘lovely banter’, in which she also shares with her four sons.

‘They argue there’s a golden child but this kind of banter is mild and not causing major issues down the track,’ she explained.

‘But when there is a really fixed perception, and the evidence within the family is quite strong, it can actually impact your sense of self, particularly when you go into the teenage years and that can become problematic.’ 

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