The 7 Deadly Sins and the TAO

<b>The 7 Deadly Sins and the TAO</b>
Use the TAO wisdom to overcome the 7 Deadly Sins, and live in reality, instead of in fancy and fantasy.

Monday, December 12, 2016

Understanding IQ to Make Your Baby Smart

To make your baby smart, you need to understand what IQ is. 

IQ is more than just about acquisition and processing of knowledge and information by the brain; it is about the application of the information to solve problems or to achieve what the mind has set out to accomplish. Intelligence is smartness and beyond: it is about connecting all the dots together, and making sense of something that is apparently senseless and irrelevant.

To illustrate, a simple baby IQ test attests to a baby’s intelligence in correctly identifying an object without seeing it after feeling the object hidden in a box; a smart baby is able to visually “see” what he touches. As a parent, you can play such similar games with your baby; the objective is not just to test his IQ but also to help his brain wired to that mode or mindset of “seeing what you touch,” thereby instrumental in increasing his intelligence.

Increase intelligence by outsmarting the brain. Of course, the human brain is a very complex organ. The good news is that Albert Einstein had a fairly average brain size—only about 15 percent larger in areas responsible for visual-spatial recognition and math processing.

There are ways to grow and develop your baby’s brain to increase his intelligence, which is a component of his genes, his environment, his experiences, his personality, and his upbringing.

Even if there are genes linked to high intelligence, they would be difficult to duplicate. Smart genes come from smart parents, who know how to provide the optimum environment for their babies to grow and develop their brains. An optimum environment means it is safe, secure, and stress-free to enjoy what he experiences, while subconsciously learns from those experiences, which become not only his personality and temperament but also his memories. All in all, your baby’s upbringing holds the key to unlocking his intelligence and potentiality, and you as the parent always play a pivotal role.

Different Aspects of IQ

Information is the resource of human intelligence. If you wish your baby to be smart and intelligent, appreciate and enhance your baby’s unique gifts.

Generally, there are several areas of intelligence demonstrated by babies and children even at an early age:

Language intelligence: babies, showing a love for words and language, learn best by seeing, hearing, and saying words.

Spatial intelligence: babies learn best by seeing things as where they are.
Kinesthetic intelligence: babies with kinesthetic skills learn best through movement of different parts of the body.

Musical intelligence: babies learn best with songs and melodies, or information put to music.

Logical intelligence: babies who love abstract patterns and relationships between objects and things learn best with puzzles and games of logic.

As a parent, you need to not only recognize and explore your baby’s unique gifts but also encourage the development of those special gifts inherent in your baby. Parents play a major role in the development of intelligence in a baby through the brain.

Remember, nobody is perfect. Despite his many physical disabilities, President Theodore Roosevelt was admitted to Harvard University at the age of 16, because he had a photographic memory and a deep desire to learn and to achieve.

Remember, nature controls your baby’s unique intellectual development; there will be limits to what his brain can do, or what you as the parent can help. Your smart baby may show his intelligence in many different ways. Don’t rely on IQ tests that your baby may later be exposed to. As a matter of fact, IQ tests were originally designed by a group of French psychologists to help and identify those “mentally challenged” children in schools, and not the smart ones. Just as Harvard psychologist Howard Gardner said: “Strong evidence exists that the mind is a multi-faceted, multi-component instrument, which cannot in any legitimate way be captured in a single paper-and-pencil style instrument. Do what you can with what you have, and leave the rest to nature.

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Stephen Lau

Copyright© by Stephen Lau

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