{"id":1389,"date":"2009-12-20T16:42:59","date_gmt":"2009-12-21T04:42:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.newagewebsitereviews.com\/?p=1389"},"modified":"2009-12-20T16:42:59","modified_gmt":"2009-12-21T04:42:59","slug":"amazing-new-millennium-children","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newagewebsitereviews.com\/blog\/amazing-new-millennium-children","title":{"rendered":"Amazing New Millennium Children"},"content":{"rendered":"

After the turn of the millennium, there was great talk about Indigo children\u00a0 and the changes that we would see in children being born this century.<\/p>\n

You would guess that these changes would be easy to identify. This amazing toddler in England is showing the signs of being a genius fairly early in his life. He may even give Einstein a run for his money!:<\/p>\n

Most kids his age are just learning the names of their favourite cartoon characters. But 2-year-old Oscar Wrigley of Berkshire, England is devouring encyclopaedias, history books, and nature guides.\u00a0 When he rides in the car with his parents, he amuses himself by identifying all of the instruments in a classical music recording. Though his body may be small, his brain never rests.<\/p>\n

Oscar\u2019s parents knew he was different from an early age: at four months old, he could point to the outfit that he wanted to wear. He began talking at nine months old, and by a year and a half, he could recite the entire alphabet. He began reading soon after, and now knows thousands of words\u2014and is happy to correct others when they don\u2019t get something quite right, as in a recent incident when a neighbour spotted a bird in the Wrigley family\u2019s garden, and asked Oscar, \u201c\u201cIs that a tweet-tweet?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cNo,\u201d the toddler replied. \u201cIt\u2019s a blue tit.\u201d<\/p>\n

While Oscar\u2019s parents have long known that their son is precocious, they\u2019ve just found out how far above the curve he is: Oscar recently took a IQ test, and got the highest possible score. He was judged to have an IQ of at least 160, putting him in the ranks of Albert Einstein and modern visionaries like Stephen Hawking. He\u2019s been accepted as Britain\u2019s youngest boy to join MENSA, the club for the extremely gifted.<\/p>\n

Oscar\u2019s parents are eager to get him enrolled in school two years early, but in the meantime, he\u2019s content to amuse himself reading books, conducting back-seat symphonies, and, of course, correcting the neighbours\u2014and possibly soon, his parents.<\/p>\n

\u201cI\u2019m fully expecting the day to come when he turns around and tells me I\u2019m an idiot.\u201d Oscar\u2019s father, Joe, told The Daily Mail.<\/a><\/p>\n

Source: Gimundo<\/a><\/p>\n

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