The Universe That Kept Growing
Ages 5-8. Once, everything in the universe was cozy and close, like a warm blanket. Then it took a slow breath. In… out… and space began to stretch. Galaxies drifted apart. Light traveled farther. The universe wasn’t breaking it was growing, making room for stars and planets.
Once, everything was close together.
Not squished.
Not crowded.
Just cozy.
Like being wrapped in your blanket on a cold night. Everything snug. Everything warm. Everything tucked in tight.
Then the universe took a breath.
A slow one.
In…
and out.
And as it breathed, space began to stretch.
Not like a rubber band snapping.
More like bread dough rising in a warm bowl. Slow. Patient. Quiet.
The stars felt it first.
“Are you moving?” one star asked.
“No,” said the other. “I think the space between us is getting bigger.”
And it was.
Galaxies drifted apart like leaves floating on a pond. Light had farther to travel. Stories took longer to arrive.
The universe kept breathing.
Stretch.
Grow.
Make room.
And as it grew, it made space for new things. New stars. New planets. New places no one had seen yet.
Somewhere, much later, it made room for a small blue planet with oceans and clouds and children who lie in bed at night and wonder about the dark.
It made room for you.
Right now, even now, the universe is still breathing. Still stretching. Still making space.
What do you think it’s making room for next?
For Grown-Ups: The universe really is expanding. Scientists discovered this in 1929 when Edwin Hubble noticed that distant galaxies are moving away from us and the farther away they are, the faster they’re going. The “breathing” in this story is a gentle way to describe what physicists call metric expansion: space itself is stretching, carrying galaxies along with it.