Helping Perceptive Children Stay Grounded at School and in Social Settings

The Telepathy Tapes and Children Who “Know Things”: How to Understand Unexplained Awareness in Kids 

When Your Child Knows Something They Shouldn’t 

After listening to The Telepathy Tapes, many parents begin to notice something subtle—but difficult to explain. 

A child answers a question before it’s asked. 
They describe something they weren’t told. 
They seem to anticipate events, emotions, or outcomes with unusual accuracy. 

At first, it may feel like coincidence. But when it happens more than once, parents often begin to wonder: 

“How does my child know this?” 
“Is this intuition—or something more?” 

These moments can feel both fascinating and unsettling—especially when there is no obvious explanation. 

Why Children Sometimes Appear to “Just Know” 

Children are naturally observant. They take in far more information than they can consciously explain. Subtle cues—tone of voice, body language, emotional shifts—are often processed quickly and deeply. 

In many cases, what appears to be unexplained awareness may come from: 

  • Strong pattern recognition  
  • Emotional attunement  
  • Environmental awareness  
  • Memory recall that feels intuitive rather than logical  
  • Vivid internal processing  

Highly perceptive children often integrate these signals in ways that feel immediate and accurate—giving the impression that they “just know.” 

When Awareness Feels Different 

For some children, however, these moments feel less like observation and more like direct knowing. 

Parents may notice: 

  • Information that seems disconnected from prior context  
  • Statements that feel unusually specific or meaningful  
  • Awareness of emotional or relational dynamics without explanation  
  • A calm certainty in the child’s response  

These experiences are often what draw parents toward conversations like those in The Telepathy Tapes

When Families Interpret This Through a Spiritual Lens 

For some families, especially those already open to spiritual frameworks, these moments are not viewed as coincidence or perception alone. 

Instead, they may be understood as: 

  • Intuitive awareness beyond typical sensory input  
  • A form of nonverbal or energetic communication  
  • Sensitivity to the presence or influence of others, including those who have passed  

In these cases, the child’s awareness is often described as: 

  • Calm and matter-of-fact  
  • Emotionally neutral or reassuring  
  • Lacking fear or confusion  

For parents, the experience can feel less like something to question—and more like something to understand responsibly. 

The Most Important Question to Ask 

Rather than trying to determine how your child knows something, a more helpful question is: 

What is the impact of this awareness on your child? 

Key considerations include: 

  • Does the child feel comfortable or overwhelmed?  
  • Does this awareness create anxiety or confidence?  
  • Is it occasional or constant?  
  • Does it interfere with daily life or relationships?  

Understanding the effect matters more than explaining the mechanism. 

When This Type of Awareness Is Not Concerning 

In many cases, a child’s intuitive awareness is well within a healthy developmental range. 

Signs it is likely manageable include: 

  • The child is calm and not distressed  
  • The awareness occurs occasionally rather than constantly  
  • The child remains engaged with school, relationships, and play  
  • The experience does not escalate in intensity  

In these situations, observation and gentle support are often enough. 

When It May Be Time to Look More Closely 

There are situations where additional support may be helpful. 

Consider seeking guidance if: 

  • The child becomes anxious or preoccupied with what they “know”  
  • The awareness feels intrusive or overwhelming  
  • Sleep or daily functioning is affected  
  • The child withdraws socially  
  • The child feels responsible for things beyond their control  

These signs indicate that the experience may need support—not explanation. 

How Parents Should Respond 

Your response will shape how your child understands and manages their awareness. 

Helpful approaches include: 

  • Staying calm and curious  
  • Listening without trying to explain immediately  
  • Focusing on the child’s emotional experience  
  • Encouraging grounding and routine  

You might say: 

  • “That’s interesting—what made you think that?”  
  • “How did that feel when you noticed it?”  

These responses allow exploration without reinforcing certainty or fear. 

What to Avoid 

Even thoughtful reactions can unintentionally create pressure or confusion. 

Try to avoid: 

  • Treating the child’s awareness as something extraordinary or defining  
  • Asking leading questions that reinforce a specific interpretation  
  • Reacting with fear or urgency  
  • Expecting the child to explain what they cannot articulate  

Children need space—not expectations. 

Why a Balanced Approach Is Essential 

Conversations like those sparked by The Telepathy Tapes can pull parents in two directions—toward dismissal or belief. 

Neither extreme is helpful. 

A balanced approach allows you to: 

  • Stay open without becoming suggestible  
  • Stay grounded without dismissing meaningful experiences  
  • Focus on your child’s well-being above all else  

This is where clarity—and confidence—develops. 

How Dr. Athena A. Drewes Supports Families 

Dr. Athena A. Drewes works with families navigating children who experience unusual awareness, sensitivity, or perception. 

Her approach helps parents: 

  • Understand their child’s experience without rushing to conclusions  
  • Support emotional regulation and grounding  
  • Respond with confidence rather than fear  
  • Create a stable environment for development  

The goal is not to define the experience—but to support the child within it. 

A Grounded Perspective for Parents 

If your child seems to “know things” in ways you cannot easily explain, you are not alone. 

You do not need to determine whether this awareness is intuitive, perceptual, or something more. 

You only need to ensure your child feels: 

  • Safe  
  • Supported  
  • Grounded  
  • Understood  

That is what allows awareness to become a strength—rather than a source of confusion. 

Contact Dr. Athena A. Drewes 

If your child demonstrates unusual awareness or intuitive sensitivity, Dr. Athena A. Drewes offers compassionate, grounded guidance for families seeking clarity. 

📍 Learn more or schedule a consultation: 
👉 https://perceptivechildren.org/ 

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