Yoohsful
And maybe, just maybe, you say it out loud:
That was yoohsful: not forgetting how to play, but remembering how to share the string. yoohsful
On the way home, she found a lost button on the sidewalk. Yoohsful meant pocketing it, because somewhere a coat was waiting to be whole again. She left a chalk arrow on a wall pointing toward a free little library. She waved at a bus driver like he was an old friend (he waved back, confused but smiling). And maybe, just maybe, you say it out
Margo woke up feeling not old, not young, but yoohsful . She left a chalk arrow on a wall
She made toast and burned it just a little, then scraped off the black parts and called it "extra crunch." Her grandmother’s teacup had a chip, but yoohsful meant loving the chip because it held yesterday’s tea and tomorrow’s stories.
At the park, kids were flying kites. An older man on a bench watched, sighing. Margo sat next to him, handed him a spare kite string, and said, "Your turn." He laughed—a real laugh, rusty but real—and soon the kite wobbled up like a happy accident.
Yoohsful isn't an age. It isn't a skill. It's a small, bright engine inside you that says: I see you. Let's make today a little more useful and a little more joyful—starting now.
