Interview someone — a friend, another blogger, your mother, the mailman — and write a post based on their responses.
They say, “Never work with children or animals.” I disagree—interviewing my 6-year-old son turned out to be the most entertaining, thought-provoking, and laughter-filled conversation I’ve had in years. Somewhere between his love for ice cream and his ghostly tickle plans, I discovered that childhood isn’t just about innocence—it’s a kind of wisdom adults often forget.
So, here’s how our exclusive interview went down—me with my “serious” journalist notebook, and him with chocolate-stained fingers and the attention span of a butterfly.
Q: If you could make one rule for the whole world, what would it be?
A: “No homework. Only ice cream. Teachers can also eat ice cream in class.”
(Imagine the UN meeting this proposal. Suddenly, world peace seems achievable.)
Q: What do you think clouds are made of?
A: “Cotton candy, but God eats the pink ones before we see them.”
(Adults: take notes. NASA, are you listening?)
Q: If toys could talk, what would they say about you?
A: “They would say—stop squishing us under your pillow at night. And also, thank you for rescuing us from the monster under the bed.”
(That’s loyalty: half complaint, half gratitude.)
Q: What is love, according to you?
A: “When mama shares the last piece of chocolate with me, even though I know she wanted it more.”
(Excuse me while I melt faster than ice cream on a summer’s day.)
Q: If you were invisible for one day, what would you do?
A: “I would tickle dad until he thought the house had a ghost.”
(So much for noble causes—welcome to invisible mischief.)
Q: If laughter had a color, what would it be?
A: “Yellow, because it looks like sunshine and sounds like a banana slipping.”
(Shakespeare could never.)
Q: If you could rename the days of the week, what would you call them?
A: “Sleepday, Chocolateday, Toyday, Cartoon-day, Picnicday, Birthday, and Sleepday again.”
(A seven-day calendar I wouldn’t mind living by.)
Q: If the moon could give gifts, what would you ask from it?
A: “A trampoline so big I can jump and touch the stars. But not too high, otherwise I’ll bump my head on Mars.”
(Practical astronaut goals.)
By the end, he dashed away mid-sentence to chase an actual butterfly, leaving me smiling at my half-finished notes. And it struck me: his answers were funny, innocent, but also deeply layered. Kids don’t carry the weight of the world—they simply create new worlds, one cotton-candy cloud at a time.
✨ Thought to Ponder: Maybe the greatest wisdom lies not in how much we know, but in how simply we can see. The world could use a little more six-year-old logic.

From the mouth of our babes, thanks for sharing. I enjoyed your interview.
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Thank you 😊
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Excellent choice of interviewee! Shakespeare could never indeed ❤
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My Son is always very curious about what I write so I thought of interviewing him😄
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hahaha 😂 superr
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Thank you 😊
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