Sunday, August 31, 2025

Spin and Splash

Home / Themes (Special Moments) / Spin and Splash

Spin and Splash

Yonkoma slice of life manga about special moments where Ubi and Kayu splash water at each other.

 Naration (limerick in haiku):

Splash with a swirl arm,
Twin laughs rise like summer charm,
Ripples dance, disarm.

Leg spins in reply,
Water arcs beneath blue sky,
Joy begins to fly.

Hips now whirl in glee,
Twins twirl like waves wild and free,
Echoes of a spree.

Laughter fills the air,
Sunlight caught in tousled hair,
Brotherhood laid bare.

Words of Wisdom:

Growing old is mandatory, but growing up is optional! - Walt Disney or Charles Theodore “Chili” Davis

That quote—“Growing old is mandatory, but growing up is optional”—is more than just a cheeky one-liner. It’s a playful yet profound reminder that while aging is inevitable, maturity doesn’t have to mean losing your sense of wonder, creativity, or fun.

Here’s a deeper look at what it really means:

Growing Old Is Mandatory

Biological reality: Time passes, and our bodies age. Wrinkles, gray hair, and birthdays are unavoidable.

Social expectations: Society often assumes that with age comes seriousness, responsibility, and a narrowing of possibilities.

Milestones and roles: We’re expected to follow a timeline—school, career, family, retirement—as if aging means ticking boxes.

Growing Up Is Optional

Mindset over age: You can be 70 and still chase dreams, laugh at silly jokes, or learn to skateboard. Maturity doesn’t mean abandoning joy.

Playfulness matters: Staying curious, imaginative, and open to new experiences keeps life vibrant.

Resisting conformity: “Growing up” often implies fitting into rigid norms. This quote rebels against that—encouraging individuality and freedom.

Why It Resonates

It gives permission to stay youthful in spirit, even as responsibilities grow.

It challenges the idea that adulthood must be dull or overly serious.

It celebrates those who refuse to let age define their identity.

Think of people like Jim Henson, Robin Williams, or even modern creators who never lost their childlike spark. They aged, yes—but they never stopped playing, imagining, or laughing.

Please share and subscribe if you like this post. For more yonkoma slice-of-life quirky tales of Ubi and Kayu, explore and enjoy their funny stories of different interesting themes.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Double Trouble

Home / Themes (Self Reflection) / Double Trouble Double Trouble Naration (limerick in haiku): Mirror tricks the eye— Ubi sees his twin and...