so what's up with the trope where children have access to magic and then lose it as a prerequisite to growing up? where does it come from, what is it for?
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it comes up in narnia where each kid gradually loses access to narnia, which is why it's on my mind, but it's also part of his dark materials which was really formative for me. the bit where lyra loses the ability to read the alethiometer "by grace" at the end
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looks like the TVTropes page i'm looking for is "children are special"
tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.
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whoa
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Replying to @QiaochuYuan
In the studies of kids with past life memories, the memories are usually gone by age 7.
Some cultures believed little children needed 3-7 years to fully incarnate into this world—before that they’re still kinda “on their way over” but not fully here from the spirit world yet
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That happens in the Mary Poppins books too; a baby is shown as being able to talk to birds and animals in first few months, but as the child acquires human speech it loses ability to talk to animals.
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