Okay, but that sounds, as if practising piano could not be fun. I can't agree with that.
Practising piano, especially when I got new sheet music, was one of the best fun, I could think of. If you can learn and play Chopin Etudes like this genious kid, what fun must that be!!! I don't think, that he is taken away joy of living because of his talent, but that he has extraordinary joy and fun - compared to "normal" kids.
I agree totally with counterpoint!
And don't agree with any of you condescending oppressors.
The concept is what makes you happy.
You're assuming, ignorantly I must add, that fun is determined by age so that certain things are fun for everyone at a certain age and others are fun for everyone at another age.
Typical modern and inhumane thinking, what nonsense life would be if that was true.
But the point is that fun is relative and we have different ideas of what fun and meaningful activities are.
For example my cousin said that his friend never go at parties and he is always in the room reading something so they was trying to convince my friend to finally have fun.
Turned it out that reading is the quintessence of fun for that guy and going at parties is the quintessence of boredome. My cousin in trying to project his idea of fun on this guy was actually try to bore him and disrupt his fun.
This guy is having his fun and what other kids may find fun is just boredome for him.
I can relate with this well, I remember when I was that age and I remember each of us classmates had different ideas of fun. I loved listening to radio, I had a passion for radios and spent a lot of time with it. At the same time I hated other things that other boys found fun.
This applies to everyone. Dancers, athletes, singers, actors ... it doesn't make a difference what their age is. They have a passion and the greatest joy of life is spending the most time possible with their passion. If some busy-bodies like those in this forum would, in the name of letting him have a normal kid life (whatever this nonsense means), preventing him from spending as much time as possible with his/her passion you would not really have saved him from an abuse, you were abusing him in the worst way possible.
After all the road to hell is always paved with good intentions.
I believe there's nothing "normal" in the life that parents nowadays want their children to live. My father got more from his life by growing in a time when you needed to get responsible soon and make a lot of experiences since a young age including poverty, death and rearing your young sibling. John Holt called the way children live nowadays a "prison garden".
I would add a prison garden of mediocrity when you're expected to live in chronic triviality and banality and be treathened if you attempt to make your existence less bland and pointless, even at such young age.