Well, that's awfully convenient that you get to argue two contradictory points. First a force user needs to hear about an ability, like you argued for Rey. Now they can just do whatever with no training...they don't even have to hear about the force.
Why does Rey need to hear about force abilities,but broom-kid does not?
You still need to explain how Rey never tried to use the force when she was younger and heard about Luke Skywalker. A point I made that you completely avoided in 5 paragraphs of writing. If you can't answer it, then your argument is debunked.
That IS the first time Luke does anything with the force. And it took TRAINING and GUIDANCE from OWK. And I don't see a similarity in Anakin involuntarily using a PASSIVE ability like force sight and someone actively and voluntarily using the force to pull a broom. Anakin did not know he had the force and never used an active ability until trained. And his daddy WAS THE FORCE ITSELF.
During the trench-run Luke didn't "just do it". He was going to ignore the force and use the targeting computer. OWK told to reach out with his feeling, not just "use the force". And the training-remote WAS the training for that. To show the audience (it is a movie) Luke could reach out with the force before actually seeing him do it in the trench run. It was a great film moment to see Luke put away the targeting computer and listen to OWK. You don't seem to remember it that way.
Story-wise Yoda was so powerful to teach Luke that the Force is beyond the physical. Otherwise, there can be other powerful force users. They're all over the PT.
You did mention natural talent, but you did not say natural talent can be developed. You said it allowed a Rey to instantly use an ability "without years of training". Developing talent and instantly doing something are two different things. And it's still not "REAL WORLD" for someone to hear about an ability and instantly be able to use it.
Ok... Didn't mean to come across as adversarial or argumentive. I evidently wasn't clear or concise in what I was trying to say.
These are my thoughts only & the way I'm interpreting things. That's all. Just trying to explain my position.
I don't think Rey ever tried any Force 'tricks' as a child, because she had no idea if the Force or even Luke were real. They were just myths & stories. She definitely has no idea she had any ability in it. Solo then tells her, all that crap you've heard about, it's real. Her mind is opened. They go to Maz's castle & she's inexplicably called by the Force itself to Anakin's saber. In her force-induced vision, she's told, by Obi-Wan no less, the EXACT same thing he told Luke after his success with the remote..."You've taken your first step..." Her eyes are opened & she has EXPERIENCED that the Force is real. In her next three times of extreme stress, she tests the waters a bit. First, she's able to resist Kylo, then she tries the mind trick & fails, tries again & succeeds, then is able to defeat a wounded Kylo Ren, only after giving into the Force.
It is a quicker time frame than what we saw with Luke, but she's not Luke. Some may disagree, but s I've said in the past, the Force itself is doing something different now, as opposed to what we saw in the past. It's neither right nor wrong, just different.
To be fair, I don't know if the broom boy even knows what he can do is special. I mean, we didn't see him use it when he was being abused, only when he was alone, & only to pick up a broom a few inches away. My point about Anakin was that he didn't know he was special either. He just thought he was good at pod racing.
To illustrate my point about talent Vs training, around here, all little kids start off playing tee ball abut age 4. We went the first day, & my son, who had never touched a bat, was picking up the ball, throwing it in the air, & tagging it pretty good. I am not a sports guy in ANY sense of the word, so no big deal to me. One of the coaches comes over & starts tossing the ball to him & he's hitting it consistently. The coach comes over & tells me to not let him play tee ball. He said if he could hit a live pitch, that was good & a year of hitting from a tee would hurt that. He offered to work with him cause he thought he showed a lot of potential, & the coach thought he could help develop into a great player. Didn't really matter, cause after a couple of seasons, he lost all interest. Nothing special about the boy, but he had a natural ability to do something a lot of the other kids couldn't, but there is no telling what he could've done if he'd gotten real training & continued with it.