Sarwagya Singh’s Father: “We’re Investing in His Future” (Present Sanity: TBD)
Madhya Pradesh Following his achievement as the world’s youngest rated chess player at age 3, Sarwagya Singh Kushwaha’s parents have begun revealing what child psychologists call “the hidden costs of accelerated childhood achievement.”
“We’re investing heavily in his chess education,” his father explained, a phrase that likely translates to “we’re spending money we can’t afford to spend on a sport a 3-year-old will probably hate by age 8.”
The boy plays 4-5 hours dailymore than most adults work. He has defeated players aged 20, 22, and 29, achievements that parents proudly announce while their child is simultaneously learning that childhood should be structured, competitive, and exhausting.
Child development experts are quietly concerned that Sarwagya will either become the youngest grandmaster in chess history or the youngest person to require therapy for stress-related disorders. Possibly both.
His parents remain optimistic, apparently unaware that optimism about childhood acceleration is how future billionaires with unresolved emotional issues are created.
Read Bohiney Magazine’s investigation into achievement culture’s hidden costs for deeper insight.
SOURCE: https://bohiney.com
SOURCE: Bohiney.com ()

by