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A Writing question....
Okay -- a building is unexpectedly attacked, and several people are killed, including (gulp) children. I'm trying to figure out if there is a real subplot for a seven year old girl or ten year old boy. Just how enterprising could an intelligent child be, especially if said child knows some of the language of the invaders, if they are taken for medical care and then hung on to because they may have hostage value. I'm thinking planning escape when they do have a feature (eye color or hair color) that might cause them to be noticed. It's winter, so clothing hiding them might help.
Their goal would be the office of a family friend -- timing when the friend will be there, so they would find the office and go several times early. One of the "captors" is not actively helping, but knows the child understands a lot of the language and does not reveal this -- and also hints when it's time to actually run.
=I= could have done this. But I was a DAMN precocious kid. How about a merely smart and observant kid? This is not in stone, I can just kill off the third kid (urp) but was trying to save a life here....
Their goal would be the office of a family friend -- timing when the friend will be there, so they would find the office and go several times early. One of the "captors" is not actively helping, but knows the child understands a lot of the language and does not reveal this -- and also hints when it's time to actually run.
=I= could have done this. But I was a DAMN precocious kid. How about a merely smart and observant kid? This is not in stone, I can just kill off the third kid (urp) but was trying to save a life here....
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Buddy? He would quite easily charm/entertain the captors until he found a way out.
Princess? She's very observant and absorbs a LOT of information. I'm not sure if she would have the courage to take the action.
All of this to say - I do think that just a smart and observant kid could pull it off. I can see a captor suspecting Buddy because of his outgoing nature. I can see a captor not suspecting Princess because she's very obedient to (non-parental) authority.
You wanna borrow them for a while?!?!? ;-)
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Potentially quite possible, without resorting to crazy luck, though luck is probably helpful. One of the reasons I like that age so much is that it's when reason really sets in, but before hormones hit. (If I had time I'd tell you about the kids who role played Holmes and Watson for a couple of months, and why I shouldn't have introduced them to Maurice Leblanc.)
They can notice a lot, they can be bright, and reason crazy well. However, their world experience tends to be patchy - so they're pretty likely to pick up and navigate a certain set of things really well, and totally miss other things and adult might think is obvious. Lots of variability, and you can pretty much play with it at will, I'd think.
On the gumption side of things... My experience is that the less comfortable a kid's environment, and the less they were surrounded by people who had their best interests at heart, the more will and able they are likely to be (assuming they're in reasonable mental and emotional health - and I mean reasonable, not good) to realize that they're in a bad situation and that they must act. It's really hard for people, not just kids, who aren't used to being threatened to get it through their heads that no, really, this situation sucks and they must act. The first time. Once they've been through it a few times there's a lot less dithering and a lot more "here we go..."
But that's a huge generalization, too, and a lot of aspects of personality and individual circumstance are likely to have as much effect.
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So, yes, even at the early age of seven my kids were able to give thoughtful advice ("Mommy, if you keep losing your purse, why don't you put it in the same place every time.")
Kids who are not allowed to voice their opinions to their parents (and get respect for them) are less likely to speak up -- but are not necessarily less likely to try something daring.
It's not a lack of intelligence that plagues them, it's a lack of height, strength, foresight, understanding of consequences, and long-term planning. If they don't see some of the Really Dangerous Things that an adult might see, they might dare where an adult would be more cautious.
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CHOMPING AT THE BIT
(to read this story!!)
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When Chris was 10 his brother went over the handle bars of a bike and he and his other brother flagged down a car and got the broken brother to the hospital. So clear thinking under pressure is possible at eh ages you are talking.
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