L. - Bless your heart! I can see how you might worry because of what people are telling you, but my best advice is not to listen to them! I'm an Early Childhood Specialist, and I can tell you that academic skills ARE NOT what is important at 3 years of age! Is he talking? Obviously. Does he have creative abilities? Obviously, with the stories he is telling you! Then ask yourself: Does he get along with others? Can he play by himself, too? Does he like to hear you read stories to him? Does he enjoy building blocks, playing in the sand or water, playing with play dough? When he does those things, does he do new and different things from time to time? Does he sleep well, walk, run, climb? Can he feed himself? Does he talk to adults and children? Can he hold a crayon or a marker?
If he is developing in these areas, then that means he is a perfectly normal three-year-old! Society is putting MUCH too much pressure on little children to learn academic skills at a young age, and not only is it wrong, it can actually be harmful if it's done too much. It can start making him feel he is not capable of learning, and he can develop low self-esteem. AND it can make him stop wanting to try new things, which can destroy his self-confidence.
So please, please, don't worry about him! He sounds perfectly delightful! Telling imaginative stories is a good thing. You may even have a gifted child! :)
Sincerely,
B. Thompson