What Happens To Child Prodigies When They Grow Up?

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  • @coldfire0007
    @coldfire0007 8 років тому +2875

    When i grow up, I want to be a child prodigy

    • @coldfire0007
      @coldfire0007 8 років тому +75

      Grammar Jew Thats how refrences work

    • @darklight6566
      @darklight6566 7 років тому +110

      You'd better want to be something else.
      It's a shitty life.

    • @valentineyves
      @valentineyves 7 років тому +12

      coldfire0007 😂😂

    • @sarahtmbell1309
      @sarahtmbell1309 7 років тому +11

      It'll be too late by then! You can't be a child when you're grown up!

    • @janawahba7350
      @janawahba7350 7 років тому +7

      coldfire0007 should've said that when you were a fetus but it's too late now.

  • @catherinet.6584
    @catherinet.6584 7 років тому +745

    "When you're ten, they call you a prodigy. When you're fifteen, they call you a genius. Once you hit twenty, you're just an ordinary person." - Haruka Nanase

    • @DellTewahdo
      @DellTewahdo 6 років тому +76

      Catherine T. Why that happens is that the child prodigy doesn't continue to exercise their muscle because they've always been ahead of the game. So everyone else catches up.

    • @Saint_BullCaptain
      @Saint_BullCaptain 5 років тому +24

      DellTewahdo child prodigies are still a lot more intelligent than well educated adults

    • @primuladinverno
      @primuladinverno 5 років тому +3

      +Catherine T.
      Free! It's from the first episode, isn't it? i loved that quote

    • @aquasnippy
      @aquasnippy 4 роки тому +6

      NK Ozpectro but it’s not like other people aren’t like that too.

    • @cassandrakemara8755
      @cassandrakemara8755 4 роки тому +48

      Talented adults don't get as much attention because they don't have the cute factor

  • @cloud1036
    @cloud1036 7 років тому +439

    *"If you know you're the smartest person in the room, you're in the wrong room" -Anonymous*
    This quote applies to child prodigies very much.

    • @jazziecontreras9555
      @jazziecontreras9555 6 років тому +1

      |-/

    • @shedotshearts
      @shedotshearts 5 років тому +3

      Arthur's Horse E to the X to the A to the C to the T to the L to the Y!

    • @Zenovarse
      @Zenovarse 4 роки тому +2

      Just me and my best friend in the same room
      Me: *Leaves*

    • @kukacostejberizs
      @kukacostejberizs 4 роки тому +1

      Me at school. 😠😤

    • @DaviSilva-oc7iv
      @DaviSilva-oc7iv 2 роки тому +12

      I feel like that in my classroom, everyone is impressed at how I now so much about everything, but the fact is that I don't know so much, rather, they know too little. Often I thought I was just wasting time there, I could be at a better school :(

  • @tairneanaich
    @tairneanaich 8 років тому +259

    I hate the ideas of prodigy. When I was little, they told me I was so smart, but when I grew I became average because my intelligence was no longer considered unusual. It meant I had no idea how to study because I never had to.

  • @djjesus.hediedforyourspins3154
    @djjesus.hediedforyourspins3154 8 років тому +660

    I used to be one. Until I became a lazy 17 year old who will probably waste his entire life making dumb youtube comments like this one.

    • @seemahegde04
      @seemahegde04 8 років тому +17

      Same but I'm 16

    • @boxxtrot9609
      @boxxtrot9609 7 років тому +16

      DJ Jesus.He Died for your spins
      noice name

    • @unrielistic
      @unrielistic 7 років тому +4

      DJ Jesus.He Died for your spins I used to be one, now I'm a sadistic, depressed misanthropist.

    • @Karma0211
      @Karma0211 7 років тому +1

      Look at you, Mr.self-proclaimed prodigy ^^

    • @ruthad2736
      @ruthad2736 7 років тому +2

      I'm 14 and is doing the same thing as you do until the moment you saw this reply hangin'

  • @philipchristiansen1495
    @philipchristiansen1495 8 років тому +862

    The word genius is so misused.

    • @ariel4778
      @ariel4778 8 років тому +128

      More like overused.

    • @philipchristiansen1495
      @philipchristiansen1495 8 років тому +7

      indeed

    • @jasperian5697
      @jasperian5697 8 років тому +6

      Loosely used :^)

    • @acadatube9002
      @acadatube9002 8 років тому +39

      Agreed. Like, Einstein- genius. Alexander Gram Bell- genius. Mozart- Genius. Greg and Mitch of Asapscience- Genius and Genius. Jk Rowling- Genius. Newton - genius. Me- Genius. That's about it.

    • @acadatube9002
      @acadatube9002 8 років тому +5

      +Acadatube (jk jk. I'm no genius. The rest, yes. Yes yes yes.)

  • @elizabeth9841
    @elizabeth9841 7 років тому +87

    Throughout my childhood, I was constantly told I was the smartest kid anyone had ever known. I rarely had to try at anything and my teachers loved me. Now I'm in high school and shit starts to get hard I'm losing my mind because I wasn't ever taught how to put effort into my work.

    • @AnjaHuebel1
      @AnjaHuebel1 2 роки тому +9

      You can still learn that, through humility for example. Looking at how other people succeed through hard work!

    • @RitaColacoNuminous
      @RitaColacoNuminous 2 роки тому +7

      But I get her, it is not that easy to do something you never needed to do all of a sudden, "how to learn surviving skills to endure a ground with different physics apllied to it?" I'm in my last year of high school, never studied, never paid attention to classes, and I feel stupid for not preparing for the challenges ahead, the path while you're young usually follows about the same reality rules, it is relatively easy to go along with the script, but far ahead driving will be done in the sky.

    • @alissa...
      @alissa... 2 роки тому +3

      @@RitaColacoNuminous This is a real problem :c I suffer from it too, but I am a university student now xD I remember watching a video about this specific problem. I'll see if I can find it. (I couldn't :'u) (I COULD XDDD)

    • @alissa...
      @alissa... 2 роки тому +1

      @@RitaColacoNuminous I found the video xDDDDDDd ua-cam.com/video/QUjYy4Ksy1E/v-deo.html
      I saw it in my recommended and remembered this xD

    • @randomytguy7315
      @randomytguy7315 2 роки тому +4

      I never had to study to get straight A's and now that I'm in college I struggle to even open a book

  • @ashluna5104
    @ashluna5104 7 років тому +43

    I was the opposite of a child prodigy. My parents were worried when I was in second grade that I wouldn't be able to comprehend reading, math, etc. because I was such a slow learner. Now I have a full ride to a state college and I ranked 3 out of 900 kids in my grade.

  • @FoodGurudevs
    @FoodGurudevs 8 років тому +189

    I'm a Prodigy too.. I wrote this comment in flat 30mins with 7 edits.. 😎

    • @kayaeki
      @kayaeki 7 років тому +16

      Well you're lying unless you really edit this comment

    • @joeljoshyjoeljoshy7823
      @joeljoshyjoeljoshy7823 7 років тому +8

      Yash Keni he might just redo it before he posts it

    • @saisan7577
      @saisan7577 5 років тому +5

      Food Gurudev Omg people can’t understand jokes 😂

    • @lambertoplayz5000
      @lambertoplayz5000 4 роки тому

      Legend

  • @twillianalovesanime682
    @twillianalovesanime682 8 років тому +122

    So.. Just to summarize: once your 5yrs old you're called a prodigy, once your 10 to 15 yrs old you're called a genius but once your 18 to 20 yrs old you're normal and after older than that you're basically nothing. XP
    "Wow, life really is unfair when it comes to being special.."

  • @disdanzafilm
    @disdanzafilm 8 років тому +212

    I was a creativity bomb at young age. Now, I am just a high functioning sociopath.

    • @Dark3nedDragon
      @Dark3nedDragon 8 років тому +11

      I know the feeling

    • @osmosiswright9924
      @osmosiswright9924 7 років тому +11

      Looks like I know who to avoid.

    • @carryon5021
      @carryon5021 4 роки тому +7

      I wasn't aware, that Sherlock Holmes wrote UA-cam comments.

    • @rebeccax1431
      @rebeccax1431 4 роки тому +3

      I wanted to be a pirate. Now, I am just a high functioning sociopath.

    • @smokeybrown8752
      @smokeybrown8752 3 роки тому +1

      That’s me but I still have some creativity left.

  • @CherriesDemure
    @CherriesDemure 3 роки тому +5

    I was a child prodigy, I was smart, I quickly improved, an excellent growing artist, amazing writer, a fantastic mathematical genius and an avid novel reader, now, I’m just worthless and burnt out.
    The world is messed up, so many prodigy kids have burned out and lost hope.
    There is no hope for us.
    Edit: hey guys, I recently just got diagnosed with autism and ADHD which explains my talents and struggles, so wish me luck as I learn to manage and get myself back in track

  • @ShawnRavenfire
    @ShawnRavenfire 8 років тому +296

    What if all children are geniuses, and the ones we call prodigies are just the ones who discovered their talents sooner? I think Einstein said something along these lines, but I can't remember the exact quote.

    • @bertie7983
      @bertie7983 8 років тому +139

      "Everybody is a genius, but if ask a fish to climb a tree it lives its whole life thinking it was stupid"- Albert Einstein

    • @drwxmbo4639
      @drwxmbo4639 8 років тому +142

      "Everyone's a genius.But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree,it will live its whole life believing it's stupid"

    • @janawahba7350
      @janawahba7350 7 років тому

      Pecan Pie I don't understand,can someone please explain to me what Einstein said.

    • @Nathan-on2vr
      @Nathan-on2vr 7 років тому +31

      Light Higher everybody is a genius at something but if you judge a thing by something they cannot do they will feel like they are stupid, a fish cannot climb a tree and saying its stupid to not be able to is wrong

    • @vulpix5342
      @vulpix5342 7 років тому +37

      My teacher always said that "Everyone is born with gifts, some just open theirs sooner than others" which I always found to be true

  • @DorianMattar
    @DorianMattar 8 років тому +33

    I was a late bloomer, as a kid a couldn't tie a shoe lace, now I can tie one.

    • @KatBarrera07
      @KatBarrera07 2 роки тому

      I understand, something similar happened to me, I learned extremely fast some things but I just couldn’t do others, while I was the first kid in my class to learn how to read and write I couldn’t hold the pencil correctly, while I was learning basic arithmetic, I could barely jump in two feet, tying my shoelaces or button up my shirt

  • @siri5186
    @siri5186 7 років тому +11

    My grandpa was once a child prodigy. He went to college at 14. Became a doctor but couldn't handle the heat so he resorted to alcohol and cigarettes. I am his granddaughter and I made him stop smoking but still need a bit help to make him stop drinking but he has cut it down a lot.

    • @kofiZayn777
      @kofiZayn777 10 місяців тому +1

      How did he go to college at 14?was he homeschooled or what?

  • @medviation
    @medviation 8 років тому +21

    When I was 5, I made aerial perspective drawings of my city. Now, I just flunked out of architecture school.

    • @KreativeHogwartsLegacyGUIDES
      @KreativeHogwartsLegacyGUIDES 5 років тому +1

      do you like architecture? or art? i wanted to do architecture at one point, then i met an architecture school and i was like this is beyond limiting.

  • @leomoss246
    @leomoss246 8 років тому +63

    I've taken two "i.q" tests and I placed over 130. That shit is bullcrap I am not even "smart" I just have a high comprehension level. I can't count well. My command over the english language is moderate at best. I am somewhat of a loaner and I don't do anything amazing. I only have the ability to pick up things fast and do them moderately not amazingly well. Don't put too much stock in i.q we are all good at stuff.

    • @oiux5749
      @oiux5749 8 років тому +1

      +leo Moss Well how old were you when you took them? Past the age range of about 10-12, the tests should start to fall apart.

    • @leomoss246
      @leomoss246 8 років тому

      Oiux Edits The first one I was twenty four and the second one was last year. They are bullshit tests.

    • @oiux5749
      @oiux5749 8 років тому +1

      Then that's why. The IQ tests are designed to test childrens verbal abilities. Search it up, it's pointless to take IQ's past 10-12.

    • @KatBarrera07
      @KatBarrera07 2 роки тому

      @@oiux5749 so it just measures the development in children??? I took one when I was 12 and I scored like 115-118 and I was curious to see if the result has changed in 10 years 🧐

  • @CogniVision
    @CogniVision 8 років тому +238

    As I've always preached it. It's always the damn parents.

    • @neuralmute
      @neuralmute 8 років тому +22

      +CogniVision
      Hells yes. I was a child prodigy, who grew up in a repressive, abusive, thoroughly dysfunctional family. I also grew up in a small, rural town with little to no opportunity to use or develop my talents and skills, and where the people had little to no tolerance for anyone out of the ordinary. My last battery of tests (which were done for psychiatric purposes) still placed my intelligence in the 99.5th percentile, but the fact is that as an adult, I'm a mentally ill, emotionally crippled, fuck-up, wasting the amazing brain I was born with because I can hardly negotiate daily life. I have dreams and ambitions that I can't see myself ever realising, because how can you write brilliant novels and make great art when you can't even muster the will to do the damn dishes?

    • @neuralmute
      @neuralmute 8 років тому +3

      *****
      Well, it's good to know we're not alone, at least. The question now is what to do about it. I for one am not quite ready to jump off a bridge just yet.

    • @seresvatasugimori8961
      @seresvatasugimori8961 7 років тому +4

      CogniVision unless the child has the resources and the will to practice every single day, then the parents realize that their child has a thing for it and get tutors and stuff for them and they become either famous, depressed, lonely, or an average person

    • @kyleefeist1324
      @kyleefeist1324 7 років тому +3

      IT SUCKS I totally relate to the abuse, family dsyfunction, everything...
      and it sucks because you know growing up that people only prize you for your intelligence. AND YPU GET ALL THIS FREAKING PRESSURE ON YPU FOR EVERY LAST THING YOU DO... OMG THE TALKS ABOUT WHICH ELEMENTARY SCHOOL I WENT TO AND HOW MAKING MY DESCION I NEEDED TO BE AWARE OF HOW IT WOULD AFFECT ME FOR COLLEGE

    • @kyleefeist1324
      @kyleefeist1324 7 років тому +1

      neuralmute s JUST BLEH TO ALL OF WHAT WE HAVE BEEN PUT THROUGH....
      I remember when it forst started becoming clear I was going to be smarter than my parents... the ego shock they took from an 8 yr old and the put downs....
      It's a blessing because I couldn't imagine having lived life without my love of science and math.
      But it is a mother fuckn curse bc the pressure.... and it"s really stupid too... all the literature there is out there only paints us as clique backstabbing narrcisstic if there is more than one of us in a story AND URG ALL OF THE LITERTUARE ABOUT CHILD GENISUSES (minus Report Card. LOVED that one) JUST GETS US SO WRONG :'(

  • @janscott602
    @janscott602 7 років тому +93

    Telling a kid they are a genius or prodigy is child abuse. Those kids define themselves as prodigies then become fearful of things that will rob them of that status. They don't take risks, they fear failure, they take the safest path like being a doctor or scientist. Kids with extreme talent that are never told they are prodigies are far more likely to blossom into creatives. They don't fear failure and even encourage it by taking risks and stepping outside the system.

    • @HOPE-wg5pb
      @HOPE-wg5pb 2 роки тому

      i disagree to a great extent ... they already know they are prodigy!

    • @randomytguy7315
      @randomytguy7315 2 роки тому +2

      @@HOPE-wg5pb not always, they might know they're above average but most of em just consider themselves prodigies because people told them so. Children don't understand talents as well as we adults do, they most likely think that they just practice more instead of having a gift

  • @DarkandTwisted
    @DarkandTwisted 2 роки тому +4

    I was a child prodigy, but I was so shy and quiet no one ever knew my talents except for a few teachers. I mean, I was writing very completing stories when I was 9. Stories that wowed one teacher in particular, but that teacher basically bullied me, so I couldn't count on her to help me. Now that I am an adult and out of my shyness, I am able to use my gifts (fiction writing, illustration, animation, composing music, writing music, singing, dancing, painting, and more). I think it also matters what type of school you go to and what type of friends are around you. I went to public school and should have been at a school for gifted children and had friends that were like me.

    • @MishaSkripach
      @MishaSkripach Рік тому

      Are you a famous writer or illustrator now? Are you published?

  • @CupidsGrimReapR
    @CupidsGrimReapR 8 років тому +37

    Are child prodigies born with talents? That goes against everything about how skill is built up.. if a child prodigy is born with an aptitude for the piano but never plays a piano, what then?

    • @aarontheperson6867
      @aarontheperson6867 8 років тому +2

      sucks to be them

    • @LegalizeTheNuclearBomb
      @LegalizeTheNuclearBomb 7 років тому +24

      I know, here I am not knowing that I could be an amazing porn star from the very start and I'll never know....

    • @willowwisp6955
      @willowwisp6955 7 років тому

      Ilovepuns! I feel the same with any of my interess

    • @TheeBlackSilhouette
      @TheeBlackSilhouette 7 років тому

      Let's get spooky a phenomenon called Natural Talent is in place.It can't be explained,it just happens

    • @sop6545
      @sop6545 6 років тому

      Some times there drawn to the subject. It becomes there passion.

  • @NTheDragon0
    @NTheDragon0 4 роки тому +8

    I strongly believe that if we nurture the kids struggling and give them more encouragement instead of giving the gifted better education and praise, this world will become a much better place.

  • @mechanicalagony8570
    @mechanicalagony8570 7 років тому +16

    When I was 7, I was already at a college level of Literature/Reading. My teachers had to give me courses that focused on extremely advanced vocabulary (the kind of courses you'd actually learn in college), and would ask me to constantly read novels meant for adults (The first one they gave me was The Illustrated Man). The older I got, the more they would overwork me to see how far my intelligence with literature/reading could go. It.. honestly sucked. I didn't really have much of a 'fun' childhood due to constant learning.

  • @tsundereshark5945
    @tsundereshark5945 7 років тому +41

    Im a 20 year old child prodigy

    • @bharathk98
      @bharathk98 5 років тому +2

      Tsundere Shark So am I

  • @ButtKraken01
    @ButtKraken01 8 років тому +7

    All passion dies when you finish college and end up with a ton of debt working at a retail store.

    • @KreativeHogwartsLegacyGUIDES
      @KreativeHogwartsLegacyGUIDES 5 років тому

      yes. thats a huge problem. and in america school is kinda scam, since tuition is astronomical

  • @Nexus2Eden
    @Nexus2Eden 8 років тому +29

    I was a child protege, however after decades of being targeted for attacks and continually bullied for my natural abilities - I turned to drugs and dropped out of sight. I learned at a very early age that standing out only made you a target for jealousy and envy and that it was much safer to hide my talents and 'act' like those around me so as not to be singled out and harassed. It isn't so much of a gift as a curse I'm afraid.

    • @gregzeng
      @gregzeng 8 років тому

      Glad you know what statistical deviance truly is. When I attend industry events, the professional head hunters detect who I am. Some of them have word of mouth that I am present, so they do their racist best to silence me.

    • @avidhahaldar8599
      @avidhahaldar8599 4 роки тому +3

      Oh gosh.. It's these envious n horrid people.. Oh I can't say-

  • @culdee4525
    @culdee4525 8 років тому +424

    Go right to the start of the video and pause lol 😂

    • @poeperdhe
      @poeperdhe 8 років тому +52

      😯😯😯

    • @chapniak7977
      @chapniak7977 8 років тому

      +culdee4 lol

    • @sonjapunk2
      @sonjapunk2 8 років тому

      It isnt funny

    • @iknowrstank
      @iknowrstank 8 років тому +25

      Julia's face when it goes in the wrong hole

    • @macyS7
      @macyS7 8 років тому +17

      +iknowrstank childish af

  • @sonasierra7824
    @sonasierra7824 7 років тому +7

    Well, my sister is a prodigy. When she was 1, we discovered that she could read English letters and numbers. Then, we also found out by accident, that by the age of three, she read in English, Russian and Armenian, as well as could do basic math. Then, I sat down with her and started doing some math. By the age of 4, she could do 5th grade math. Now tho, at the age of 7, she does her best to be like every single kid in her class, which means she's trying to act like she doesn't know it. It's only by accident when she lets out a weird math equation and everyone freaks out. Yep. That's sad af.

  • @horizonx3235
    @horizonx3235 7 років тому +13

    Does eating more than you naturally can count me as a Prodigy?

  • @ohwow9559
    @ohwow9559 7 років тому +15

    When you're ten, they call you prodigy,
    When you're fifteen, they call you genius,
    Once you hit twenty, you're just an ordinary person
    - Haruka Nanase

  • @austinhernandez2716
    @austinhernandez2716 7 років тому +20

    Yeah well they're lucky to have opportunities too. I bet some poor kids could have been prodigies too but they didn't have anything to show it

  • @jositamu551
    @jositamu551 7 років тому +9

    I was really good at writing when I was a kid and often wrote for fun. In no way was I a prodigy, I was just above average. I enjoyed it until I got older; we were forced to write in school and it made writing in my free time more of a task than something I enjoyed. I'm just an average student when it comes to English now.

  • @firepoet6926
    @firepoet6926 6 років тому +4

    My biggest thing was that I could read fluently by 2. My mom refused to let me skip throughout grade school for fear of being bullied, truthfully I was always torn about leaving friends behind.

  • @marissaojeda7517
    @marissaojeda7517 8 років тому +7

    As a kid I could have been a genius if I had a better education, any bit of knowledge I gobbled up but "life" always got in the way and I had to learn how to be an adult early on so all my focus went towards being the best person possible (character development), common sense, learning how to be in school (I learned everything on my own as a kid) and focusing all my energy on one feild instead of just every subject I could get my hands on. It's not necessary to be well-rounded in a career :(

  • @dragonofepics7324
    @dragonofepics7324 7 років тому +6

    I have autism and I used to be really good at remembering stuff. In fifth grade I would sometimes do math problems in my head even if we were allowed to use calculators. My teachers were impressed and I didn't want to let myself down or then down, so I kept doing it in my head. Now I'm ninth grade and can barely remember things even after I just looked at it or was told what to do. Basically, I think I might have overworked my brain ( if that's possible ) and now can barely retain a thing. Either that or I've developed some kind of memory loss. Idk. I don't want to downplay or belittle anyone who actually has memory loss.
    I'd also get praised for how good my drawing was when I was younger. Now, looking at other artists younger and older than me with great art styles and just beautiful art skills in general is kinda discouraging. I know these skills develop over years, and I've been drawing my whole life, but I feel like I might mess up and never be as good as them.

    • @dragonofepics7324
      @dragonofepics7324 7 років тому +3

      It's also kinda depressing for me because I see other autistics with great memories and making contributions to the world in science and art, and I just haven't done anything except forget what I was just told.

  • @Bounsingonbongos1
    @Bounsingonbongos1 8 років тому +276

    IQ is a creepy leftover from the age of eugenics.

    • @tn9711
      @tn9711 8 років тому

      Indeed

    • @MonkeyspankO
      @MonkeyspankO 8 років тому +4

      +Racist Bassist you make it sound like the human race has moved on...those 'theories' are alive and well. You're welcome for the pleasant thought.

    • @JerehmiaBoaz
      @JerehmiaBoaz 8 років тому +12

      +Racist Bassist No, IQ is a way to measure intelligence, that is describe it objectively by numbers. That's the way hard science works and psychology is trying to be a hard science (unlike Freudian psychiatry for instance).

    • @TheEternalPie
      @TheEternalPie 8 років тому +41

      +JerehmiaBoaz No, IQ has always been meant to be a way to tell what someones strength and weakness are. "Intelligence" is subjective. It's just that modern society uses IQ to brag about.

    • @Tespri
      @Tespri 8 років тому +10

      +Racist Bassist Just like running test is creepy leftover from age of eugenics?
      IQ tests does what it's made for. Testing people's capability to solve puzzles. Which has always been seen as sign of intelligence.

  • @eukaryoticcell3288
    @eukaryoticcell3288 8 років тому +40

    My Father was a child prodigy, currently having an IQ well over 160

  • @connerwilson142
    @connerwilson142 3 роки тому +8

    I've always thought of prodigies as having extreme concentrated interests, being good at one thing, especially at an early age. This is good for being the best at one specific thing at a young age, when there are only so many things one can be good at. Masters on the other hand will have more diffuse interests, being good at many things and being able to relate concepts between fields of study. It takes time to become a true master.

  • @elly8353
    @elly8353 7 років тому +6

    Members of both sides of my family had IQ's of around 138 when tested at around age 3 or 4, but due to the serious depression that also runs on both sides of our family it is relatively impossible for any of us to complete, let alone excel in, high school and university without suicide attempts, mental breakdowns and immobilising depression. It's a little sad, really.

  • @iverkjellkken6569
    @iverkjellkken6569 7 років тому +3

    You could argue that I was a genius when I was young, but my mother made me spend countless hours in phsycotherapy trying to make "normal". that plus the lack of motivation I got when I was older made my talents fade away and I'm still not "normal". and now instead of being a scientist I am making comments on UA-cam.

  • @waitasecond...
    @waitasecond... 2 роки тому +7

    "We don't really know how many child prodigies are there in this world. But there's plenty enough to make reality shows about child prodigies."
    Nailed it!

  • @claymore609
    @claymore609 8 років тому +30

    Yup I can tell you "no" cause me a great fucking anxiety today, not to mention the teacher induced/supported bullying through racial preferences, which has given me issues with authoritative figures, I still would love to attend a university, I still love the stars, and all the sciences.
    My best teacher once told me "you ask me so many questions, and I don't always have an answer for you, But that doesn't mean you should give up if I don't have an answer for you, ask someone else, if they don't know, look in a book, if the answer is not there keep looking, until you find it"...
    My dad is my favourite teacher
    Sometimes it's not the trail of paper you leave behind, but those lives you change by just caring.

  • @raph009
    @raph009 8 років тому +2

    I was not considered autistic but was still highly ahead of my time. Teachers harrassed my mom to make me skip years and put me in the higher level classes because they told her that otherwise, I would become lazy and guess what? She didn't listen and it actually happened!! Fortunately enough, I'm somewhat of a rebel and didn't follow her strict rules either so I kinda had a narrow escape from "not standing out". I used to be a college dropout (started different techniques but I've quitted all of them at first year) but came back to college years later and the teachers called me "genius" (apparently I was very popular among the teachers): my papers were of master/doctorate level and I only was in my very first year of B.A. The only disappointment I have though, is that, because my mom always said I was not going for med because I was lazy, I'm constantly unsatisfied with my accomplishments and I often feel like I don't really deserve the good grades I have or any great words and I'm now suffering from performance anxiety. Despite that, I'm usually told that, if I continue the way I'm going, I'll make a whole lot of great things and have everything to stand out.
    It can be very cool to be a child prodigy for as long as you have parents that are willing to make you go as far as you can and that won't go all "jealy" over you. Kinda absurd...

  • @Abdullah-ti1uy
    @Abdullah-ti1uy 8 років тому +37

    Serious question, where can I take a legitimate IQ test?

    • @meateatingplant4830
      @meateatingplant4830 8 років тому +10

      in a pub with drunk men

    • @bobbyharper8710
      @bobbyharper8710 8 років тому +2

      +Abdullah NF I wonder if they include questions about hunting and fishing? We would consider a person pretty stupid if they couldn't tell a buck track from a doe track.

    • @ReplayedCo
      @ReplayedCo 8 років тому

      +Carter Smith couldn't have said it better

    • @aybmnn
      @aybmnn 8 років тому

      +bacon Lord you need to pay for that one

    • @theatheistspoon2551
      @theatheistspoon2551 8 років тому +2

      +Bobby Harper who's we?

  • @aybmnn
    @aybmnn 8 років тому +19

    2:22 is the part you came for

  • @vampirica89
    @vampirica89 8 років тому +5

    I knew how to read fluently when I was 3. Now I'm 26 and still struggling to finish my undergraduate degree. I never had proper studying habits or motivation.

    • @AnjaHuebel1
      @AnjaHuebel1 2 роки тому

      Yep, intelligence has nothing much to do with other personality traits. No indicator of success in adult life, either.

  • @Lemonz1989
    @Lemonz1989 7 років тому +2

    I wasn't a prodigy, but I never had problems in school and always had an intense interest in biology and excelled in the field (still do) compared to my peers, but nothing revolutionary. I later found out my IQ is 142, but all my potential is stifled by anxiety and depression, as well as a huge fear of rejection and failure. I'm a perfectionist and if I know I can't get a perfect score I just procrastinate until the deadline has passed, and think "If I only started earlier... Oh well, at least I didin't submit a subpar project."

  • @williamwilliams1000
    @williamwilliams1000 Рік тому +3

    Creativity and Prodigeousness are more or less mutually exclusive. Very few child prodigies are successful because in order to be creative as a child prodigy you literally have to know everything.
    This is why child prodigies like Johnny Von Neuman can come up with creative solutions but most child prodigies fail to do so.
    Being that prodigies aren't scatter brained, in fact they have laser focus, the only way their making creative connections is if they know literally everything in the field their working with.
    Given prodigies are basically told their superior human beings since birth, which their not, most of them fail to live up to their potential, the same way most scatter brained geniuses fail to live up to their potential because people told them they were stupid since birth.

  • @almabujaj1804
    @almabujaj1804 7 років тому +8

    I was always a good student in school and achieved in the arts. I did art and drew very well to my ability and people were like "How do you do that?" I say "This? This is not good enough." "That's not true." they say. Also, I have been doing piano for about 2 years now and my teacher tells me "You can do great things, if you try." and I now go by that rule in life. I also love the write and have a passion for it. It also interests me about different writing styles. I want to be a artist when I go up and I want to achieve my high expectations also I want to a writer, maybe pianoist and many more achievements. So I told this kid in art class the weird self I am, "You'll see me SUCCEED!"

  • @BeMeCam
    @BeMeCam 7 років тому +17

    "Following rules does not help you become Mozart". Mozart actually was a child prodigy who was very strictly parented and made to practice music relentlessly. And we all know in what life circumstances he died in.

  • @themightydragon8934
    @themightydragon8934 8 років тому +4

    I'm part of the child of the new century study in England and they test things like reading and maths among other things. At the age of 4 I had the reading age of an average 16 year old. In addition I was recently diagnosed with autism I hadn't made the link between the two until now that's pretty cool.

  • @zoomer4339
    @zoomer4339 7 років тому +8

    Here's how to be a prodigy.. Be normal. It's impossible to be normal as there's no such thing as normal if you think about it. Everything is different, so if you can somehow be "normal"... you are the greatest prodigy

  • @ucHorrible
    @ucHorrible 8 років тому +6

    i took an iq test expecting to be average, but it turns out im really stupid... ignorance is bliss my friends

    • @jweezyf0sheezy1
      @jweezyf0sheezy1 8 років тому +1

      +HermitOfTheFragshack My bullshit detector isn't going off...Am I still on youtube?
      Kudos for a truthful comment.

    • @aphrog649
      @aphrog649 8 років тому

      (if you don't mind me asking) what did you get?

    • @ucHorrible
      @ucHorrible 8 років тому

      Lily R around 90

    • @TheEternalPie
      @TheEternalPie 8 років тому

      +HermitOfTheFragshack Full scale actual test like WAIS or an online test? As I've stated in other comments, IQ is supposed to find strength and weakness, not try to define someones intelligence.

    • @ucHorrible
      @ucHorrible 8 років тому

      TheEternalPie online after i took a school test which put into special ed (not the good side)

  • @Pieceoreece
    @Pieceoreece 8 років тому +7

    I could read my eldest sister's books when i was 5 (in year 1 of school) - my eldest sister was 12 so these were books like Harry Potter etc. - remember distinctly reading the Oxford Dictionary from start to finish when i was young as well; probably about 6, i just used to love seeing what words meant.

    • @MP420ful
      @MP420ful 8 років тому +1

      while reading the dictionary is weird, Harry potter for the top few kids in 1st grade is normal and doesn't mean much, except they picked up reading quickly.

  • @seamusmccloud496
    @seamusmccloud496 8 років тому +14

    What happens to child prodigies when they grow up?
    They die

  • @melelconquistador
    @melelconquistador 7 років тому +2

    so essentially it's like big ears on a pup, they eventually grow into them and now it's a regular dog with regular sized ears.

  • @frenchtoast7708
    @frenchtoast7708 7 років тому +3

    Well, I have an IQ of 142. Elementary school was incredibly easy, and I had a very high reading level and math level. I was considered the top student, and was named so in sixth grade. The school district that I go to has a middle school and high school that both have a large concentration of high level students, so I went there. In middle school, I began to realize that there were people in the same math class or with the same reading level. In high school, where i am now, I'm in honors and AP classes, but the idea of failure isn't a concept that I enjoy because this is my first time encountering it. I've failed math tests and gotten Bs. I know that it is largely due to the fact that the school I go to is known for their competition, but it's really disheartening to see how quickly I went down in the ranks. I know I don't study nearly as much as they do, but a lot of students have already surpassed me with their grades

  • @NCXitlali
    @NCXitlali 8 років тому +13

    I was a kid genius...now I speak 7 languages :D...but I haven't accomplished shit in my life./

  • @AlisonMundie
    @AlisonMundie 8 років тому +2

    I was a child prodigy. I was put into the higher level subjects and then the advanced track in school from 1st through graduating high school. My parents wanted to keep me with kids my own age even though the schools wanted me to skip grade levels.

  • @yamchayaku
    @yamchayaku Рік тому +4

    Child prodigies fall into obscurity because everyone else ultimately catches up. the only difference is that they've hit their peak earlier than everyone else, and that peak may be lower than many others who had normal upbringings.

    • @MishaSkripach
      @MishaSkripach Рік тому

      What you say means that you don't have knowledge. In music every soloist is a former prodigy, it is a natural course of events that the most talented kids are skilled very early. Nobody then catches up with those kids, only those "catch up" who were as skilled but more obscure.

    • @yamchayaku
      @yamchayaku Рік тому +3

      @@MishaSkripach If that were true, we'd be far more advanced than we are now, which doesn't happen to be the case. And though you say ever soloist is a former prodigy, then why is the quality of our music today degrading? And to be honest, I don't know of any prodigy today that has made anything that has completely broke the barriers of progress, and I believe you can't either. The only people who were able to do that were those who have a business background, an already wealthy family and have dropped out of college.

    • @MishaSkripach
      @MishaSkripach Рік тому

      @@yamchayaku What ridiculous attempt at logic... The key thing is : YOU don't know. LEARN THEN!!!! You know too little to have an opinion.
      Martha Argehich
      Maxim Vergerov
      Vadim Repin
      Yo Yo Ma
      Daniel Barenboim
      Janine Jansen
      Julia Fischer
      Hilary Hahn
      Daniil Trifonov
      ARE ALL PRODIGIES WHO HAVE GROWN UP.
      I bet you don't know a single name out of this list.
      LEARN!!!! Before you have opinion, you need to learn.
      People will laugh at your combination of complete self-assurance coupled with complete stoopidity (spelling intended).

  • @NikorasuChan
    @NikorasuChan 8 років тому +101

    Showing Steve Jobs picture right after you say "genius" offends me

    • @Nexus2Eden
      @Nexus2Eden 8 років тому +1

      Why?

    • @sciencepro7551
      @sciencepro7551 8 років тому +7

      +Nikorasu Chan (Nichii) He is a genius, one that doesn't need the acknowledgment of people like you. Whether you like it or not, he was a corporate genius.

    • @NikorasuChan
      @NikorasuChan 8 років тому

      jk bro

    • @LegalizeTheNuclearBomb
      @LegalizeTheNuclearBomb 7 років тому +30

      you don't have to be a genius to innovate/inspire or become an entrepreneur

    • @wb6945
      @wb6945 7 років тому +2

      Jobs couldn't hold Bill Gate's jock strap.

  • @JayBez531
    @JayBez531 8 років тому +5

    I couldn't speak til I was 4yrs old.
    but WAS super intelligent in my schools growing up... That was before all the drugs and sex.
    I'm better now. and I'm running business, preach in my church and train youth on money since I was 19.

  • @twisterlord665
    @twisterlord665 8 років тому +18

    Wish I could show this to my mom about the rule part, but like always, she'll just go
    "Thats false, they didn't have scientific evidence."

  • @exmas-du1jc
    @exmas-du1jc 3 роки тому +1

    I falled of at 4th grade not because I was lazy,but because I was severely bullied and my self-esteem just called of and stop trying in life. But im happy to say I'm climbing back up in 7th just got my first 100 on a exam in ages.

  • @kcwidman
    @kcwidman 8 років тому +48

    I've always liked to consider myself a genius.

    • @euro1062
      @euro1062 8 років тому +38

      It's the thought that counts

    • @helpmefortheloveofshrek6623
      @helpmefortheloveofshrek6623 6 років тому +4

      Kai Widman The fact that you “consider” is the reason you’re not.

    • @GymCritical
      @GymCritical 6 років тому

      Kai Widman may iq is 153

    • @punctuationman334
      @punctuationman334 4 роки тому +1

      help me for the love of shrek it’s a joke jimbo.

  • @simonwang4389
    @simonwang4389 7 років тому +19

    Albert Einstein didn’t speak until he was 3 years old. He couldn't speak until several years later. No one believed in him, even his teachers thought lowly about him.
    later he stunned the whole world with his intelligence.

    • @virusvirus5477
      @virusvirus5477 5 років тому +1

      Actually that's incorrect he was actually a bookworm and a teachers pet

    • @user-oe2ip3xm4u
      @user-oe2ip3xm4u 5 років тому +1

      He also got high marks

    • @punctuationman334
      @punctuationman334 4 роки тому

      Simon Wang I’m pretty sure he had dyslexia, which made him seem dumb.

  • @ljs9986
    @ljs9986 7 років тому +2

    I was told to be gifted as a child, could talk almost perfectly at the age of 1, walked and ran by then too. School was that easy that it was boring, which soon lead to my disengagement. As life went on it only got worse, until highschool. I got a new lease of interest when entering a new school, and got into the top classes. All was well until I suddenly developed social anxiety. :/ lost all motivation, fell into depression, and hid in my home, fearful of the outside world. I'm currently sitting my GCSEs and expecting Cs, when one time my predicted grades were A*. Life sucks man.

  • @liwest511
    @liwest511 7 років тому +2

    I got tested in circa 2015 and my IQ is roughly 143 at any given time or situation.
    The other day I said "poor puppy" about a _horse_ in the Kentucky Derby...
    I meant it, too. For a solid 2 seconds. And then I felt the _horror_ set in.

  • @kellis938
    @kellis938 7 років тому +4

    3:08
    "More creative kids had less than 1 [rule]"
    So zero rules?

  • @cfry194
    @cfry194 8 років тому +16

    as a child I had a remarkable ability to absorb information on any subject really I still do I can regurgitate the info and I do understand it but I lack practical skills with most of the information unless it's math math is easy

    • @KingOfAllLlamas
      @KingOfAllLlamas 7 років тому +18

      Clayton Fry Grammar and punctuation clearly isn't easy for you...

    • @philipchristiansen1495
      @philipchristiansen1495 7 років тому

      Clayton Fry if you think math is easy you haven't done any non-trivial math

    • @virusvirus5477
      @virusvirus5477 5 років тому

      Just skip all that math and learn physics it will all suddenly come to you like me

  • @Minzon3
    @Minzon3 8 років тому +2

    Magnus Carlsen had a dad who saw the potential, and made sure that he could pursuit his passion as long as it was fun, creative and challenging in a good way for the kid. Today he's the world champion in chess. And to somewhat way, he's also taken the sport to a different level of recognition, because of his talent and his interests in other sports aswell. He's made chess popular again amongst people who really didn't have any interests in the game before. The use of technology and interactive playing has also been a huge success in the last couple of years.

  • @LilChuunosuke
    @LilChuunosuke 8 років тому +2

    I used to watch the Discovery channel when I was a kid and they actually showed documentaries instead of reality TV.
    I remember being a bored child with nothing I liked on and turning on a documentary about fish, and being able to fully comprehend everything they were talking about while I was still in preschool.
    Then, my mom would come in the room and say "Why are you watching this? This isn't a kids show, it's too complex for you." and would turn on My Little Pony as I cried out that I understood it, I liked learning about the fishies, and I hated My Little Pony.
    So there is a chance I could've been a child prodigy, but my parents wouldn't even listen to me when I said I understood nature documentaries completely.

  • @tn9711
    @tn9711 8 років тому +5

    Genius? What did they do to contribute to the fields of Music, Math or Science? Did they discover a new type of Math? Scientific Advancements? Revolutionized the way Music is made? They are intelligent but putting them besdie the term Genius is a bit overkill.

    • @Zenovarse
      @Zenovarse 4 роки тому

      Well they could... Some do...

    • @Zenovarse
      @Zenovarse 4 роки тому

      There's a much higher probability for a prodigy to make those advancements than normal people, it's just that there aren't many of them, so the majority of the contribution made is by normal people

  • @SeanPannella
    @SeanPannella 8 років тому +5

    Most of their skills are not usually all that useful and are risk adverse. An unfortunate fact is that smarter people are often more risk adverse. Even though they are smart they rarely learn how to properly weigh risk return in their life and even more rarely learn about effectual thinking. I would hypothesize that if you taught effectual thinking to high IQ youth these children would be much more likely to be remarkable when older.

  • @silvialogan9226
    @silvialogan9226 5 років тому +2

    I definitely was not a child prodigy. I seemed to be behind in learning for kids my age in my class. When I was a child in elementary, intermediate, and high school, I sometimes did not follow instructions in what the teachers were trying to say. Sometimes I misread questions in assignments and tests and I ended up failing very badly. I also suffer from Asperger's syndrome which might had been a problem. When teachers did things orally and not showed me what to do, I had enormous difficulty.

  • @Ndo01
    @Ndo01 8 років тому +1

    I'm not a genius or prodigy but the no rules thing seems very true, I remember I was a smart kid in primary school because it wasn't very strict, then in high school things got "important" and I was pretty much a dumbass, but after that I was free again and my curiosity has been insatiable ever since, allowing me to learn much more than I did in school.

  • @sakurakty7121
    @sakurakty7121 3 роки тому +4

    When i was 3 years old i cried for guitar but my parents thought I'm too tiny to hold or play it🙂 so thats why i became an average person😂😂
    Edited: now I'm an adult prodigy.

  • @Frogmolars
    @Frogmolars 8 років тому +3

    I think I might be a prodigy art wise, I've been drawing and doing all kinds of art since I was very young, my dad was just like me when he was little, but are there anymore variables that might assist in creating a prodigy? Or is it limited to households with less rules? Possibly even genetics?

  • @MrPipe007
    @MrPipe007 8 років тому +2

    I guess I was one at 10. I was playing 2 instruments and speaking 3 languages .. but I don't know if it's more of being surrounded by encouraging people with access to the right tools.

  • @JaneDoe-wd7mp
    @JaneDoe-wd7mp 7 років тому +1

    I grew up to be depressed and feeling very different from my peers. I missed out on a lot of childhood activities, and I don't feel like I have a purpose anymore. My parents were absolutely marvellous, though.

  • @MichaelMillerGR
    @MichaelMillerGR 8 років тому +3

    I drew an exact replica of Tony the Tiger when I was 3.

  • @AndiTheValkyrie
    @AndiTheValkyrie 8 років тому +22

    Nope, high IQ but no particular talent. I like to believe I was born in the wrong era and that's why my talent remains hidden.. Yeah.

    • @Pink7omy
      @Pink7omy 8 років тому

      +ScarlettShinzon same

    • @cthulhutentacles4994
      @cthulhutentacles4994 6 років тому +3

      AndiLives Maybe your talent is playing an uninvented instrument

  • @yenzyhebron5278
    @yenzyhebron5278 7 років тому +1

    So basically they're milked of all their worth at such an intimate age and then left alone to fend for themselves by flipping patties on the local fast food joint?

  • @MartinManweiler
    @MartinManweiler 8 років тому +2

    As someone who might have had aspergers as a kid (at least I felt that way at times) ..... I really learned to fit in with people and get out of my shell... but it was really hard. My advice for anyone who may be gifted in drawing/music is to just embrace it and do what feels right because you aren't going to be as happy trying to fit in. Don't listen to people that say you will never make a living doing art/music because you can if you just keep working at it and don't give up.

  • @AlanMartinez-xz5em
    @AlanMartinez-xz5em 8 років тому +3

    yes im a child prodigy i am 3 years old, cant talk and can use youtube to watch Dnews

  • @KashimusPrime
    @KashimusPrime 8 років тому +6

    I couldn't read in Kindergarten but once I was tutor taught I could read way above the average level of the other kids in my class. I also can look at something, be it machine or puzzle and figure out automatically how to work it, I do this periodically because it's fun exercise for my brain, does that make me a prodigy?

    • @geistxyz
      @geistxyz 8 років тому

      No

    • @Dark3nedDragon
      @Dark3nedDragon 8 років тому

      It means your above the norm

    • @Finity_Dust
      @Finity_Dust 8 років тому

      +KashimusPrime This is called the difference between a good education and a bad one. Nothing else.

    • @weixiao2342
      @weixiao2342 8 років тому

      +KashimusPrime sorry, probably no, I've only started learning English 3 years ago, but my reading level is higher than 99% of kids here in the U.S., it's only because I went to a very good school, and had great teachers.

    • @americana1234
      @americana1234 8 років тому

      +Emily W I think there have been studies that validate the theory that early enrichment actually increases IQ, but increases it only as high as that person's potential

  • @Sk8rGuy5141
    @Sk8rGuy5141 8 років тому +2

    Thank you DNews for this video and insight. It helped reinstate my original thoughts as to why I haven't branched out as much on my creativity and unique abilities--I've had a lot of rules set upon me since I was a child, and tend to highly excel in various "normal" roles--ending to show outstanding performances in leadership, the arts, and various other categories. However, I'd love to branch out more and am working on the confidence to do so. I've tested as being on the cusp of "genius IQ", and not that it's "everything", but I hope to be able to "use" it more creatively and interestingly in the future.

  • @SeeLina55
    @SeeLina55 7 років тому +1

    ❤❤❤❤❤This is just like me. I was diagnosed with autism and I didn't speak till the age of 4-5 years old. I remember a lot of birthdays, music, and reminders. Before I started to speak I was always good at singing even now my school said I'm one of the top talented person where I'm from. My name is Angelina Jo-lee Parker, and I'm 13 years old in Buffalo New York. ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @Vallavender333
    @Vallavender333 7 років тому +3

    when I was young I had straight As and tested in the top 2 percent of my age. but then my family moved 13 times. mostly to military based with a lot of rules. now I'm in community college with below average math scores. im not blaming it on my parents but I didn't have the most nourishing childhood. now I'm a dissapointment.

    • @dahdream6044
      @dahdream6044 7 років тому +3

      Same here. It was so easy to be cocky when everything was easy as 1-2-3. Now, everything is biting me back. Lack of social interaction and not trying to improve myself as a person really hurt me. I'm just a typical teen that seems to have no life. R.i.p. the old me.

    • @auraflowerthompson8203
      @auraflowerthompson8203 7 років тому +1

      When I was 10/11 my mum forced me to practice my spellings and I got 20 out of 20 in most tests; then when my mum stopped tutoring me I started to slack off then I got 12 out of 20.

    • @AppleberrySmith
      @AppleberrySmith 7 років тому

      Aura flower Thompson There comes a point in time when what you've studied a head for become what you are currently studying and then you learn something new.

  • @CombateArmsOndraya
    @CombateArmsOndraya 8 років тому +5

    Most prodigies become another worthless person when they grow up

  • @asenattamogga687
    @asenattamogga687 4 роки тому +1

    I was a piano prodigy at 8 and my sister was a prodigy by remembering everything about Pokémon

  • @tjpulse3591
    @tjpulse3591 8 років тому +1

    i have dyslexia. i was given a regular I.Q. test. my last one at age 14 was rated at 117. and because of my scores that did not depend on English , they estimate it could have been as much as 50 points higher. once i learned how to deal with my dyslexia, i graduated at the top of my class in college.

  • @pineapplesapples3377
    @pineapplesapples3377 7 років тому +4

    I was a great artist from a young age ,and I was also diagnosed with Aspergers. I can memorize anything I put my mind too. Aspergers is within the autistic spectrum yet it is not as noticeable that it is there. You would meet me and not be able to tell that I have it. I memorized every piece of political news I wanted during the presidential race. I go through phases of things I like. I will go crazy about the subject for a period of time then forget about it the obsess over another subject. I can be very annoying when it come to a subject I like...

    • @papisuckmypoosay69
      @papisuckmypoosay69 7 років тому

      This is like me except I was diagnosed with HFA and I'm a horrible artist

  • @vanrozay8871
    @vanrozay8871 8 років тому +3

    "Genius" has been so diluted by overuse that it's lost real meaning. Like "incredible" and "awesome" it only stands for "kinda good." I heard someone refer to Michio Kaku as a "super-genius." He's a smart guy, and gives good explanations of science, but come on!; where's the breakthrough discovery or Nobel Prize? Maybe Turing, Mozart, Shakespeare; definitely Newton and Einstein, but please don't apply the name to every smart kid.

  • @taib.2791
    @taib.2791 7 років тому +1

    I was considered a child prodigy and now I have an actual anxiety disorder so

  • @vanadium0728
    @vanadium0728 5 років тому +2

    Mozart was forced into music by his father... He didn't have passion

    • @Zenovarse
      @Zenovarse 4 роки тому

      Well he didn't stop

  • @91722854
    @91722854 7 років тому +5

    I feel like a cave man compared to these children

  • @Devil935
    @Devil935 8 років тому +2

    As soon she said "child prodigy", i see " of a specific genre, that we categorize"

  • @natalieeuley1734
    @natalieeuley1734 3 роки тому +1

    I was reading college textbooks for fun in second grade, but I was considered below grade level in reading by fourth grade. I think back to all the times as a kid that I was shot down, times when I wanted to do something arguably innocent and told no or that can't be done. I remember that the day I turned 14 I was ready to start my own business, because my parents said that was the legal age, but then they didn't help me at all. Honestly I had a lot of potential in my youth, but between school and my parents, it was completely beat out of me. Today I have a long list of mental illnesses and am barely hanging on in terms of functioning in society. I have to wonder how I would be if I was properly nurtured.

  • @aquinsvarghese9182
    @aquinsvarghese9182 8 років тому +16

    We have a six year old kid in our college chem class.

    • @Dommy521
      @Dommy521 8 років тому

      +Aquins Varghese same

    • @solasta.x
      @solasta.x 7 років тому +17

      Aquins Varghese there's a 2 year old in my algebra class. Beat that you liars 😂😂😂

    • @potatoman8763
      @potatoman8763 7 років тому +2

      I know a baby with four master's degrees.