Indigo Children: Fact or Fiction? The new age children have been variously described of late as Indigos (because of the supposed color of their auras), Star Kids (because of their purported origination from other worlds), Crystals (because some say they are highly developed), and so forth. Easy-spanish-rice-recipe. Professionals in the field of child development and education, parents, even the Indigo children themselves, are having problems with the idea that certain character traits are the sole province of special youngsters when, in fact, the vast majority of today's children match those same traits – without evidencing anything like a purple aura, or being a hybrid from another planet, or possessing "god-like" wisdom. Being supersensitive, confident, highly intelligent, unusually creative, nonconformist, extraordinarily psychic and spiritually aware, impatient, empathic, able to heal or aid others in significant ways, abstracting at young ages, spatial learner
Indigo Children Skeptics and ADHD
As with any of these so-called "new age" ideas, the Indigo Children movement has its fair share of skeptics, and with good reason.
Benjamin Witts, in a Skeptical Inquirer article, points out that the descriptions of supposed Indigo Children are so broad and vague that they could easily apply to almost any child at one stage or another.
* Indigo Children in the Classroom
* Support for Sensitive Indigo Kids
* Indigo Kids and Crystal Children
Additionally, many Indigo Children supporters claim that the only foolproof ways to determine if a child is really Indigo is by reading his aura or using Kirlian photography; as magician and skeptic James Randi wrote in his 1982 book Flim-Flam, neither of these methods is empirically valid. Cool.
Indigo Children Skeptics and ADHD Video:
* Indigo Children in the Classroom
* Support for Sensitive Indigo Kids
* Indigo Kids and Crystal Children
Additionally, many Indigo Children supporters claim that the only foolproof ways to determine if a child is really Indigo is by reading his aura or using Kirlian photography; as magician and skeptic James Randi wrote in his 1982 book Flim-Flam, neither of these methods is empirically valid. Cool.
I would like to speak to Benjamin Witts.Please could he contact me and I will show him what a child of Indigo with both parents being rhesus rare blood types can do!!!
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