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Tonight on The Sleepy Loom, we drift into one of the simplest yet most profound truths of physics: the law of inertia, the quiet principle that motion never truly dies.

From a rolling ball to the paths of planets, from Galileo’s swinging lanterns to Newton’s cosmic insights, this story unfolds like a gentle lullaby for the mind. Together, we’ll explore how inertia weaves through the universe, and even through our own lives in the habits, rhythms, and quiet motions that carry us forward.

This is not just science, it is wonder, rest, and reflection.
A soft journey through history, imagination, and the cosmos itself.

#inertia #sleepstory #thesleepyloom #bedtimestory #science #physics #calmingnarration #relaxation #meditation #universe

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Learning
Transcript
00:00Hello and welcome to the Sleepy Loom. I'm so glad you are here.
00:03Tonight we'll drift into one of the quietest yet most profound truths in physics,
00:08a principle so simple that a child's toy can reveal it,
00:11and yet so deep that it shapes the fate of planets, stars, and galaxies.
00:16It is the law of inertia, the strange and steady truth that motion never truly dies.
00:22We'll travel together across the worlds of science, history, and imagination,
00:26from the ancient thinkers who first wondered why things move,
00:30to Galileo watching lanterns swing in a cathedral,
00:33to Newton gazing into the fabric of the cosmos itself.
00:37And all the while, we'll soften into a calm rhythm,
00:40a story that's both a lullaby for the mind and a gentle unfolding of wonder.
00:46Before we begin, if you find comfort here,
00:49I would love it if you could like this video, subscribe, and share your thoughts below.
00:54And if you'd like to support these stories further,
00:56you can even buy me a coffee, the link is in the description.
01:00Now, let us step softly into tonight's story.
01:03In your everyday world, motion always seems to fade.
01:07A ball pushed across the floor rolls, slows, and comes to rest in the corner.
01:12A child's swing moves back and forth for a while,
01:15but the arcs become smaller until it hangs quietly again.
01:18Even a bird gliding high above will eventually dip,
01:21spreading its wings once more to keep afloat.
01:23To our eyes, stillness seems like the natural end of things.
01:29We grow used to the idea that all movement must wither,
01:32as though nature herself has a preference for rest,
01:34gently pulling all things back into stillness.
01:37But the truth, discovered not quickly,
01:39but slowly, carefully across centuries,
01:42is stranger and more beautiful.
01:44Motion is not fragile at all.
01:46Motion once born does not fade by itself.
01:49It does not need to be pushed again and again to continue.
01:52Instead, motion is eternal,
01:54unless something steps in to interfere.
01:57This quiet fact is what we call the law of inertia.
02:00An object at rest stays at rest,
02:02an object in motion stays in motion,
02:04continuing along its path,
02:06unless some other force changes it.
02:09It sounds almost obvious when spoken aloud,
02:11yet for much of history, it was anything but obvious.
02:14For thousands of years, the world seemed to say otherwise.
02:17People saw carts that stopped when the oxen rested,
02:21boats that slowed when the oars were lifted,
02:23and arrows that fell after a short flight.
02:26From these sights, the conclusion felt natural.
02:30Motion dies unless kept alive.
02:32The philosophers of ancient Greece believed exactly that.
02:36To them, motion was like fire.
02:38It could burn brightly,
02:39but it would go out if not fed with fuel.
02:42A cart rolled forward only as long
02:43as something continued to push it.
02:45An arrow sped through the air
02:47not because of the force of the bowstring alone,
02:49but because they imagined the air itself
02:51was rushing behind, urging it along.
02:54To them, rest was the natural state of all matter.
02:58Movement was temporary, fragile, in need of care.
03:01And why would they think differently?
03:03The everyday world seemed to prove them right.
03:06Drop a stone, and it falls, then stays still.
03:09Push a barrel, and it rolls, then halts.
03:13Even a child running must pause,
03:15catching breath, until motion ceases.
03:18The illusion was complete,
03:20but hidden beneath all this was a quiet thief.
03:22Something unseen, always present,
03:24always stealing a little from every moving thing.
03:27That thief was friction.
03:29Friction is like an invisible hand that slows motion,
03:32the way cold air takes warmth from the skin.
03:34It exists everywhere,
03:36between cartwheels and the road,
03:38between the ball and the floor,
03:40between the bird's wings and the endless sea of air.
03:43Even water itself resists the oars,
03:45dragging against the boat.
03:47Everywhere, friction whispers its slowing song.
03:51And so to human eyes,
03:52it looked as though motion always died.
03:54But what if friction were gone?
03:56What if the world could be stripped
03:58of its invisible grasp,
03:59the surfaces smoothed until nothing resisted?
04:01This is the question Galileo began to ask.
04:05In the quiet of his study,
04:07he rolled balls down wooden ramps,
04:09first on rough planks,
04:10then on smoother ones.
04:12Each time he made the surface gentler,
04:14the balls rolled farther.
04:16He watched carefully,
04:18noting how the loss of roughness
04:19gave motion more life.
04:21And then he imagined,
04:22if a ball were placed on a surface
04:24so perfectly smooth
04:25that no resistance at all remained,
04:27would it ever stop?
04:29The answer, he realized, was no.
04:31The ball would roll endlessly,
04:33carrying on with the same speed
04:35in the same direction,
04:36with no one needing to touch it again.
04:38This was a revelation.
04:40The first whisper of inertia.
04:42The quiet realization
04:43that motion, once begun,
04:45never truly dies on its own.
04:47It was as though the universe
04:48carried a hidden promise.
04:50Every journey, once started, continues.
04:53Every step, every push, every glide,
04:55leaves a thread of movement
04:56woven into reality.
04:57Galileo's thought was simple,
05:00yet radical.
05:01It shifted the world
05:02from believing stillness
05:03was nature's favorite state
05:04to seeing that motion itself
05:06is natural, eternal, and enduring.
05:09And in that whisper of insight,
05:11the stage was set
05:11for an even greater discovery to come,
05:14the grand laws of Newton,
05:16which would show that motion,
05:17far from fragile,
05:18is the very heartbeat of the cosmos.
05:21Picture Galileo,
05:23a young man standing quietly
05:24in the Grand Cathedral of Pisa.
05:26The air is heavy with incense,
05:28light filters through stained glass,
05:30and high above,
05:31great bronze lanterns sway gently
05:33from their chains after being lit.
05:35Their motion is slow,
05:36almost hypnotic,
05:37forward, back, forward, back,
05:39steady as a heartbeat.
05:41Most people present
05:42saw only the glow of flame
05:43and the solemnity of worship,
05:45but Galileo saw something else.
05:47Rhythm, pattern, persistence.
05:49He noticed how the lanterns
05:51swung with a constancy
05:52that seemed woven
05:53into the very fabric of time.
05:56The length of each arc
05:57diminished, yes,
05:58but the beat of the swing,
05:59the time it took,
06:00remained the same,
06:01whether the lantern moved
06:02in wide sweeps or small ones.
06:05For Galileo,
06:05these were not mere lamps.
06:07They were teachers.
06:09They hinted at laws of nature
06:11hidden beneath appearances.
06:13This curiosity would guide him
06:15back into his study,
06:16where he set up
06:17experiments of his own.
06:18He built wooden ramps
06:19and carefully polished them.
06:20Then he rolled bronze balls
06:22down their slopes,
06:24observing, measuring,
06:25and thinking.
06:26He noticed how the balls,
06:27once set in motion,
06:29seemed to resist coming to rest.
06:31They slowed, yes,
06:32but not on their own.
06:34The slowing always came
06:35from some interference.
06:37The roughness of the wood,
06:39the bump of the table,
06:40the resistance of the air.
06:42The smoother he made the surface,
06:44the farther the balls rolled.
06:46With each improvement,
06:47he peeled away a layer of illusion,
06:49and in time,
06:50he saw it clearly.
06:51If there were no resistance at all,
06:53no roughness,
06:54no drag,
06:55then the motion would continue endlessly.
06:58This was a radical thought.
07:00For centuries,
07:01philosophers had believed
07:02the opposite,
07:03that motion was fleeting,
07:04fragile,
07:04a spark that quickly went out.
07:06But here,
07:07Galileo saw that stillness
07:09is not the natural state.
07:11Motion is.
07:12He could not yet express this
07:13fully in mathematical law,
07:15but he had touched the thread
07:16of a truth
07:17that ran through the universe.
07:19It would be Isaac Newton
07:20who wove that thread
07:21into a clear and lasting form.
07:24Newton lived a generation
07:25after Galileo,
07:26but his work was built
07:27upon the foundations
07:28Galileo had laid.
07:30Where Galileo's ramps
07:31and lanterns hinted,
07:33Newton's mind crystallized.
07:35In his Principia Mathematica,
07:38Newton wrote down
07:38what would become known
07:39as the first law of motion,
07:41the law of inertia itself.
07:43Every body persists
07:45in its state of rest
07:46or of uniform motion
07:47in a straight line
07:48unless compelled
07:49to change that state
07:50by forces impressed upon it.
07:53These words are simple,
07:54almost spare,
07:55yet within them
07:56lies a vision of the cosmos
07:58both vast and eternal.
08:00To Newton,
08:00the universe was like
08:01a grand loom
08:02where threads of motion
08:04extend endlessly forward,
08:05each unbroken
08:06unless tugged
08:07by the hand
08:08of some other force.
08:09Consider an arrow
08:10loosed from a bow.
08:11In the air we breathe,
08:13it arcs and falls,
08:14tugged down by gravity,
08:15slowed by the thickness of air,
08:17but strip away
08:17those influences,
08:19remove air,
08:20remove gravity,
08:21and the arrow
08:21would not falter.
08:23It would glide forever
08:24in a straight
08:25and unwavering line.
08:27Consider a planet
08:27flung into orbit
08:28around a star.
08:30Its motion is not
08:31something that dies away.
08:32Instead,
08:33it persists,
08:34its speed and direction
08:35held steady
08:36by the law of inertia.
08:38The only reason
08:39it curves around the star
08:40is that gravity
08:40is tugging it inward.
08:42Gravity were gone,
08:43the planet would not
08:44slow or stop.
08:45It would fly off
08:46endlessly into the dark.
08:48Even you,
08:49sitting still in a chair,
08:50feel like you are at rest.
08:53Yet Newton's law
08:53reminds us that
08:54you too
08:55are part of a vast,
08:56ongoing dance
08:57of inertia.
08:58You are being carried
08:59eastward as the earth
09:00spins on its axis.
09:02You are swept along
09:03in our planet's orbit,
09:04hurtling around the sun
09:05at thousands of miles per hour.
09:07And beyond that,
09:09the sun itself
09:09carries you
09:10as it drifts
09:10around the galaxy,
09:12circling the Milky Way
09:13over millions of years.
09:15You may feel still,
09:16but in truth,
09:17you are part of
09:18ceaseless,
09:18unbroken motion.
09:20The motions do not fade,
09:22they persist.
09:23They echo across time itself.
09:25And thanks to
09:26Galileo's lanterns,
09:28Newton's apple,
09:28and the clarity
09:29of their minds,
09:30we can now see
09:31the universe
09:31not as a place
09:32that prefers stillness,
09:34but as a tapestry
09:35woven of endless motion,
09:36carried forward
09:37by the law of inertia.
09:39To feel the law of inertia
09:40in its purest form,
09:42we must lift our gaze
09:43beyond earth's busy landscapes,
09:45beyond its roads
09:46where wheels meet gravel,
09:48beyond its air
09:48where feathers and wings
09:49are slowed by drag,
09:51beyond its oceans
09:52where waves always resist
09:53a moving hull.
09:54We must drift outward
09:56into space.
09:57There, motion becomes
09:58something different,
09:59something closer
10:00to eternal.
10:02In orbit and beyond,
10:03the invisible hand
10:04of friction
10:05loosens its grip.
10:06There is no ground
10:07to catch a rolling ball,
10:09no thick air
10:09to press against
10:10the feathers of a bird,
10:11no grain of sand
10:12to rub against a wheel.
10:14Space is almost
10:15perfect emptiness.
10:17And in that emptiness,
10:18the truth of inertia
10:19shines with
10:20breathtaking clarity.
10:22Consider a spacecraft.
10:24Once it is given a push,
10:25it does not need
10:26to keep its engines firing
10:27to glide onward.
10:28It simply moves,
10:30carrying the momentum
10:31of its launch
10:31forever forward.
10:33If nothing interferes,
10:34if no planet
10:35pulls at it
10:36with gravity,
10:37if no dust or rock
10:38collides with it,
10:39it will never stop.
10:41It will continue
10:41to trace a straight
10:42and endless line
10:43through the void.
10:45This is why
10:45satellites launched
10:46decades ago
10:47still circle
10:48our planet faithfully.
10:50Their orbits
10:50do not fade
10:51by themselves.
10:52They are maintained
10:53by inertia,
10:54their motion
10:55gently curved
10:56by the pull
10:56of Earth's gravity.
10:58Only the faintest
10:59resistance
10:59from the upper
11:00atmosphere
11:01or the rare
11:02influence
11:02of other forces
11:03can slowly
11:04change their course.
11:06Think, too,
11:07of the great explorers
11:08we have sent beyond.
11:10The space probes
11:10that left Earth
11:11in the 20th century
11:12have become
11:13true travelers
11:13of inertia.
11:15Pioneer 10,
11:16launched in 1972,
11:18has passed far
11:19beyond the orbit
11:20of Pluto,
11:21coasting silently outward.
11:23Voyager 1,
11:24its younger cousin,
11:25launched in 1977,
11:26has gone farther still,
11:28past the reach
11:29of the sun's
11:29protective wind
11:30into interstellar space.
11:32Voyager's engines
11:33are long silent.
11:34Its mission is powered
11:35now only by
11:36fading radioisotopes,
11:37a weak warmth
11:38keeping its instruments alive.
11:40But it's motion
11:41that needs no fuel.
11:43It moves
11:43because it moved once.
11:45The push was given
11:46at launch,
11:47and inertia
11:47carries it still,
11:49across a darkness
11:49so deep
11:50that light itself
11:51takes years to cross.
11:53And it will keep moving
11:54long after Earth
11:55has changed
11:56beyond recognition,
11:57long after our languages
11:58have shifted,
11:59long after our continents
12:00have reshaped,
12:02long after the mountains
12:03we know have worn down
12:04to dust.
12:05Voyager will continue,
12:07a small spark
12:08in the grand ocean
12:09of inertia,
12:10carrying a memory
12:11of human hands
12:11that once set it free.
12:14Inertia in this way
12:15is more than a law
12:16of physics.
12:17It is a memory
12:17of motion
12:18written into the fabric
12:19of reality.
12:20Every launch,
12:21every collision,
12:22every quiet drift
12:23leaves behind an echo
12:24that endures.
12:25But inertia
12:26is not only
12:27for spacecraft.
12:28It is written
12:29into the very structure
12:30of the stars.
12:31Our own sun,
12:32like all stars,
12:33began as a cold cloud
12:34of gas and dust.
12:36Gravity pulled it together,
12:37but even then,
12:38motion was present.
12:40The cloud spun faintly,
12:41and as it shrank,
12:42that spin quickened.
12:44And it has never ceased.
12:45The sun turns slowly still,
12:47its rotation carried forward
12:49by inertia,
12:50its spin a continuation
12:51of the movement
12:52it inherited at birth.
12:53And this is not unique.
12:55Across the universe,
12:56countless stars whirl
12:57with the same persistence.
12:59Some rotate slowly,
13:01taking months
13:01to complete a turn.
13:03Others spin so quickly
13:04that they bulge
13:05at the equator,
13:06their inertia fighting
13:07against the inward pull
13:08of gravity.
13:09Step back even farther,
13:11and galaxies themselves,
13:12vast islands
13:13of billions of stars,
13:15turn like wheels of light
13:16across millions of years.
13:18Their spiral arms
13:19do not collapse
13:20into stillness.
13:21Their rotation
13:22is a testament
13:23to inertia
13:23on the grandest scales,
13:25a motion so ancient
13:26and vast
13:27that our lifetimes
13:27seem like a flicker
13:28against it.
13:30And then there is light itself,
13:32the purest child
13:33of inertia.
13:34When a photon is born,
13:35perhaps in the heart
13:36of a star,
13:37it begins a journey outward.
13:39Once free,
13:40it does not slow.
13:41It does not fade
13:42with distance.
13:43It continues forward,
13:44straight and unbending,
13:45unless caught by dust
13:46or absorbed by matter.
13:49Some of the light
13:49you see
13:50when you look
13:50at the stars tonight
13:51began its travel
13:52millions of years ago,
13:54long before humans
13:55ever walked the earth.
13:56It has crossed
13:57gulfs of space
13:58vast beyond measure,
13:59untouched,
14:00carried faithfully
14:01by inertia
14:02until the final instant
14:03when it enters your eyes.
14:05And so we find
14:06that the universe itself
14:07is a sea of motion,
14:08stars,
14:09galaxies,
14:10particles,
14:11spacecraft,
14:11light.
14:12Nothing ever truly
14:13comes to rest.
14:15Motion never dies.
14:16It only changes,
14:17taking new forms,
14:18weaving into new patterns.
14:20The cosmic sea
14:21of inertia
14:21is everywhere,
14:22and you right now
14:23are floating in it.
14:25And yet,
14:26inertia is not only
14:27a law of matter.
14:28It is not just
14:29the domain of planets,
14:30stars,
14:31or spacecraft
14:31sailing silently
14:32through the void.
14:34It is also
14:34a quiet mirror
14:35for our own lives,
14:37an unseen rhythm
14:37that shapes the way
14:38we think,
14:39act,
14:39and move through time.
14:41We, too,
14:42carry momentum.
14:43A habit,
14:44once set in motion,
14:45tends to continue.
14:46Whether it is
14:47the habit of rising early
14:48to greet the dawn,
14:49or the habit
14:50of delaying tasks
14:51until tomorrow,
14:52the pattern,
14:53once begun,
14:53often persists.
14:54It is like a stone
14:55rolling down a slope,
14:57small at first,
14:58then gathering strength,
15:00carrying itself forward
15:01without further effort.
15:02A choice made today
15:03can ripple
15:04into the days ahead,
15:05changing the course
15:06of a week,
15:07a year,
15:08even a lifetime.
15:09A single nudge,
15:11a kind word
15:12spoken at the right moment,
15:13an idea sparking
15:14in the quiet of thought,
15:16a small inspiration
15:17that catches hold,
15:18can set you moving
15:19in a direction
15:20you never planned,
15:21carrying you farther
15:22than you expected,
15:23simply because nothing
15:24has stepped in
15:25to stop it.
15:27In this way,
15:28the law of inertia
15:28is written not only
15:29in the physics of objects,
15:31but in the unfolding
15:32of human experience.
15:34Think of how difficult
15:34it often feels
15:35to begin something new.
15:37Starting from rest
15:38takes effort.
15:39The first movement
15:40of a body at rest
15:41requires a push,
15:42a burst of energy,
15:43a moment of courage.
15:44It can feel heavy,
15:46almost impossible.
15:47But then,
15:48once the first step
15:49is taken,
15:50something changes.
15:52The next step
15:53comes more easily,
15:54and soon there is
15:55a rhythm,
15:56a flow,
15:57a gathering of motion
15:58that seems to carry you
15:59forward almost
16:00without effort.
16:01Just as a rolling ball
16:02gathers ease,
16:04we too find that
16:05beginnings are
16:05the hardest part.
16:07Once we are in motion,
16:08the journey
16:08sustains itself.
16:10This is why
16:11those first moments
16:12matter so deeply,
16:13why the smallest nudge,
16:15the tiniest act
16:16of beginning,
16:17can alter the course
16:17of a lifetime.
16:19But even when you
16:20believe yourself
16:20to be still,
16:21you are not.
16:22You are part of motion,
16:24through and through.
16:25The blood in your veins
16:26moves with a pulse
16:27that began before
16:28you ever drew
16:29your first breath.
16:30That rhythm
16:31was started by your heart
16:32when you were still
16:32inside the womb,
16:34and it has never
16:34paused since.
16:36Your breath
16:36rises and falls,
16:38a quiet tide,
16:39a gentle wave
16:40that comes and goes,
16:41carrying life
16:42through your body.
16:43Even your cells
16:44are never at rest.
16:46Tiny engines within
16:47them spin ceaselessly.
16:48Molecules collide.
16:50DNA unwinds
16:51and copies itself.
16:52Proteins fold
16:53and unfold.
16:54You are,
16:55at every scale,
16:56alive with motion.
16:57And beyond your body,
16:58the motions
16:59grow larger still.
17:01The chair you rest
17:01upon is carried
17:02eastward with the
17:03spinning of the earth.
17:04The earth itself
17:05sweeps you around
17:06the sun at 19 miles
17:08every second.
17:09And the sun,
17:10in turn,
17:10bears you along
17:11as it drifts
17:12in its orbit
17:12around the center
17:13of the galaxy.
17:14A journey that takes
17:16over 200 million years
17:17to complete.
17:18You are never still,
17:19not truly.
17:21And when you drift
17:22into sleep tonight,
17:23motion will carry you still.
17:25Your mind,
17:26like a quiet traveler,
17:27will wander through
17:28landscapes of memory
17:29and dream.
17:31You may revisit
17:32old moments,
17:33weaving them
17:33into new stories.
17:34You may find yourself
17:35soaring through
17:36impossible skies
17:37or sinking into oceans
17:38that exist only
17:39within the imagination.
17:41Even in rest,
17:42thought flows.
17:44The tides of the brain
17:45never stop moving.
17:46They only change direction,
17:48entering new patterns
17:49of rhythm and quiet.
17:51The law of inertia
17:51whispers here, too.
17:53Nothing ends.
17:54Everything continues
17:55until touched
17:56by another force.
17:57A story once begun
17:58does not vanish.
18:00It drifts in memory.
18:01A friendship once formed
18:02carries its echoes
18:03long after the voices
18:04have gone silent.
18:05An idea planted
18:07like a seed
18:08may lie dormant
18:09until the right moment
18:10brings it alive again.
18:11This is inertia,
18:13reflected in the human soul.
18:15Continuity,
18:16persistence,
18:17the gentle truth
18:17that motion carries on.
18:19So as you prepare to rest,
18:21you may find comfort
18:22in this law,
18:23that you are part
18:23of an unbroken flow,
18:25that your breath,
18:26your heartbeat,
18:27your thoughts,
18:28your very being
18:29are threads in a fabric
18:30that never truly
18:31stops moving.
18:32The same law
18:33that guides planets
18:34and galaxies
18:35also guides you.
18:36The same persistence
18:37that carries Voyager
18:38beyond the stars
18:39carries the smallest beat
18:40within your chest.
18:42And so as you let go tonight,
18:44drifting into the softness
18:45of sleep,
18:46know that motion
18:47carries you even there,
18:48through dreams,
18:49through memory,
18:51through the quiet tides
18:51of thought.
18:53The law of inertia
18:54whispers gently,
18:55nothing ends.
18:57Everything continues
18:58in one form or another
18:59until touched
19:00by another force.
19:01And so,
19:03tonight,
19:03we have wandered together
19:04through the soft corridors
19:06of motion.
19:07We began with a simple wonder.
19:09Why does movement
19:10fade on Earth,
19:11yet persist
19:11in the absence of touch?
19:13We lingered with Galileo,
19:15watching his lantern swing
19:16in Pisa's cathedral,
19:18and with Newton,
19:19as he laid the foundation
19:20of a universe
19:20ruled by laws
19:21both subtle
19:22and profound.
19:23We drifted farther still,
19:26outward into the cosmic sea,
19:27where spacecraft glide
19:28endlessly,
19:29and light itself
19:30crosses unimaginable distances
19:32with quiet persistence.
19:34And at last,
19:35we returned inward
19:36to ourselves,
19:37to the recognition
19:38that inertia
19:39is not only a law
19:40of physics,
19:41but also a reflection
19:42of the patterns
19:43we carry within our lives.
19:45The universe,
19:46dear listener,
19:46is never still.
19:48It is a grand weaving
19:49of endless motion,
19:50planets turning,
19:51galaxies circling,
19:52blood flowing,
19:53breath rising and falling,
19:55thought and dream
19:56moving like tides
19:57through the night.
19:57And you, too,
19:59are part of this tapestry,
20:01a thread within
20:02the fabric of motion
20:03that stretches
20:03from the smallest particles
20:05to the farthest galaxies.
20:07As you drift toward rest,
20:08may you feel comfort
20:09in this gentle truth.
20:11Nothing truly ends.
20:13Every step,
20:14every breath,
20:14every spark of light
20:15carries on
20:16in some way forever.
20:18Let that thought cradle you
20:20as softly as a lullaby.
20:21Thank you for spending
20:23this time with me
20:24here at the Sleepy Loom.
20:26If this story
20:26has brought you
20:27a sense of calm,
20:28I would be so grateful
20:29if you could like this video,
20:31subscribe to the channel,
20:32and share your reflections
20:33in the comments.
20:34And if you'd like to support
20:35more of these bedtime journeys,
20:37you can buy me a coffee.
20:39The link is waiting for you
20:40in the description.
20:42Now, let the story
20:43fade into silence.
20:45May your night be peaceful,
20:47your rest deep,
20:48and your dreams tender
20:49as the stars above.
20:51Good night.
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