My daughter started telling stories when she was three.
Most of it was reused, recycled and repurposed from the stories I had told her or what she saw on You Tube (Link to the proof: Plagiarism with Brains: Reuse, Recycle, Repurpose). She would add or changes animals in my animal stories and replaced mango with pumpkin in fairytales.
Yesterday, she wrote her first piece of poetry–on the fly and in 60-seconds flat. I actually had to ask her if she had taken ‘inspiration’ from someone. She claims she hadn’t.
Here is the piece. Before you ask, I have taken Your Highness’s permission.

Touch the sky,
Touch the sun,
Just go on and have fun.
You don’t know how long it will stay,
Or rather it will just go away.
I haven’t correct anything there. I had just asked her why she wanted to write game score on the diary I had given her to write poetry and stories in. So, she just took a pen and jotted these lines on the first page (rather the cardboard) of blank diary.
Now that she has a foot in the door, I can hope. I know, there is no guarantee that she would want to continue at all. But that’s life of a parent.
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That is definitely a talent to be encouraged, and speaks to me of excellent parenting too.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Thank you, Pete! ☺️
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it’s so joyful and resonant. Treasure it, Shaily. Keep it. Who knows, it maybe the first flowering of a significant writer —
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I totally agree John!
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That looks very encouraging. Cheers, Jon.
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Thank you, Jon! My husband and I are over the moon. At 3rd grade now, my daughter can read and write better than most of her teachers and can summarise a chapter in less than 5 lines, which needs another level of language skill.
Now, she is stepping on the next level: expressing her own thoughts. I hope it continues.
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