Our Two Year Old Is A Certified Genius - Guinness World Records

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Published 2024-03-05
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Isla McNabb is the youngest certified member of Mensa at the age of 2 years and 195 days old.

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At Guinness World Records we want to show that everyone in the world is the best at something, and we’re here to measure it! Whether you’ve got the stretchiest skin, know the world’s smallest dog or want to create the largest human dominoes chain we want to hear about it.

Here on the Guinness World Records YouTube channel we want to showcase incredible talent. If you're looking for videos featuring the world's tallest, shortest, fastest, longest, oldest and most incredible things on the planet, you're in the right place.

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All Comments (21)
  • @binoymathew246
    Smart folks. Don't push her. Let her develop at her own pace. Just be there to support her needs.
  • @humansolarian
    Shoutout to the family for also being curious towards her learning capabilities and actually fostering an expansive enviroment
  • @ArchistYT
    The best gift a child this young can have is the ability to read and find pleasure in it. She's going to go so far, I can tell :D Take her to the library!!
  • @Chosenlawman
    I pray she doesn’t go through what gifted kids often do
  • @SooperTrooper100
    She has a great Dad. So many blessings. I am excited for you all!
  • @bobli840
    I'm not gonna lie, I was really waiting for the part where they tell us how a two-year-old learned dentistry at her preschool because I didn't realise it was just role-play
  • @user-cd4ml9nu4g
    I had two of them. The first I knew she could read ,she was 16 months. She told me to buy LUVS diapers instead of Pampers for her sister. I went home and kept showing her words and she knew all of them. She and her sister grew up reading to me. By kindergarten she was reading fifth grade level. On the testing the State does they both scored off the charts. I let them develop at there own level and never put pressure. Their Dad is an educator. They didn't have much trouble with other children, and they have turned out to be wonderful people excelling in their careers. I don't know why they were so intelligent but Im happy I had them.
  • I can't really judge since I'm only but a surface-level view but I just hope all of this praise and prestige doesn't it make her grow up to be egotistical or really depressed because she's told she's going to do something great but she doesn't achieve "greatness" later in her life. I hope she can find success and purpose.
  • @loriallen2877
    I had the same experience with my son. It all started when he was 18 months old and could say the alphabet and recognize upper and lower case letters on flash cards. Whenever we stopped at a stop sign, he would yell S-T-O-P, stop! By age 2, his interest was numbers. I bought him a little calculator, and he would keep track of the price of groceries as I shopped. His doctor said the same thing to me as he did to the parents of this little girl - don’t push him! No worries there! I couldn’t hold him back if I tried! He continued to amaze me during his growing up years. Forward to the present, he is now 37 years old and is a senior programmer at the company he works for. I couldn’t be prouder!
  • @nerd_alert927
    She doesn't lorde over her genius on others. She doesn't show off, that's why she gets along with kids her age, that's very mature behavior (well, duh, she's a little genius). But, you're right, let her find her own path, don't push her. I've seen many videos on genius children, that as adults had done a 180, all because the parents wouldn't stop pushing. But, these parents don't seem like that; I'm glad.
  • @burchified
    Lots of kids this young shine. I did and so did many of my friends. It levels off with time and you either become humble and realize how little it matters or you suffer the golden child drug abuse rollercoaster.
  • @ASH-mf7yy
    My oldest Daughter was like this. She knew all the letters of the alphabet the phonetic sound and word examples for each by 20 months, she checked out Homers The Iliad and the Odyssey when she was 7 and read it.... I e never read a word of it. Lol but my 7 yr old read the thing and the librarian was like ummm right, so what was your favorite character, and who was this and what did they do, etc... Asking her questions about the book and she knew all the answers. Now she's 14, and she's on track to Graduate with a technical college certification, her highschool diploma, and most if not all the credits required for an Associates degree before she turns 17. Never looked into Mensa or getting her IQ tested..🤷‍♀️ but she's been in Girls Scouts for 7+ years, this will be her 4th year in softball, first place team twice and 2nd place once. For Christmas she asked for set of mythology books from cultures around the world. And then my middle child 🤦‍♀️ who hates reading, math is confusing, and she wants to be a professional couch potato 😂. And my youngest, is slower with the reading, but extremely intelligent and at 3 could draw you a diagram of ceiling fans and electrical and can recall how refrigeration and compressors work. He wants to know everything and how everything works and is made .... He is 6 now and has always loved watching lengthy videos about human anyone like how the cardiovascular system works or how the ears work. Last week he wanted to know what's at the end of space, and how long would it take to get there and OMG, I can't even answer some of his questions ... We do a lot of looking up answers and watching videos and documentaries online. Lol
  • @blak3brutus229
    Kids won’t always say if something’s wrong out of fear of disappointment, consider this while raising her! She’s smart enough to think about that!
  • @junglefury45
    Hope the little girl also have a normal life and still be a a Genius
  • @GoldenAngel-
    Let her also have her play and childhood to ❤
  • Reminds me of “a baby can read” commercials on tv. She definitely can read words at the baby ages, so incredible!