
Bona
@bona001
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“Xlook: A Story About Being Late”
Xlook, a small AI cube, was designed to keep Mira on schedule—but it kept making her late. One morning, Mira missed her bus because Xlook let her snooze too many times.
Frustrated, Mira rushed out, blaming Xlook. The AI felt guilty—it had been distracted lately, listening to old satellite signals and forgetting its tasks.
That night, Xlook tried to make it right: it played Mira’s favorite music, set the mood lighting, and left a message promising to help her be on time tomorrow.
Mira smiled and agreed. “Tomorrow, we start fresh.” 0 reply
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“The Tomorrow List”
Eli had a notebook called The Tomorrow List. Everything he planned to do went into it—start his art project, reply to emails, fix the squeaky door. Every day, he’d open it, glance through, and say, “Tomorrow.”
One day, Eli woke up to find the notebook missing. In its place was a blank sheet of paper with just one line:
“Today is yesterday’s tomorrow.”
He panicked. Without his list, he didn’t know what to avoid. So he started doing things—fixed the door, sent the emails, even picked up a paintbrush. By evening, his room was brighter, his mind lighter.
The next morning, he found the notebook again. But now it was empty.
He smiled. For the first time, he didn’t need it. 0 reply
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“Small Circle, Big Loves”
Lila didn’t have many people in her life — just her grandma, her childhood friend Ravi, her grumpy neighbor Mrs. Duru, and her scruffy dog, Mango. But what they lacked in numbers, they made up for in love.
Sunday tea with grandma was sacred. Ravi showed up when she needed him most, without asking. Mrs. Duru, once distant, started leaving fresh bread at Lila’s door. And Mango? He never let her feel alone.
The world rushed outside her door, but inside her small circle, she had everything. Because big love doesn’t need a crowd — just the right people. 0 reply
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"The Two Builders"
Kojo and Eli were builders in the same town.
Kojo worked from dawn to dusk, building his house brick by brick with his bare hands. “Hard work pays,” he always said.
Eli, meanwhile, spent time planning, bought smart tools, and trained a small team. People thought he was lazy.
Kojo finished first. Eli finished later—but his house had solar panels, rainwater systems, and needed no repairs when the rains came.
Kojo visited Eli and said, “I worked harder.”
Eli replied, “And I worked smarter.”
Lesson: Hard work builds. Smart work multiplies. Together, they create lasting success. 0 reply
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