Imagine a world where everything, no matter how complex, can be understood using only the words people use most often. It's a place where the big, hard words are put away, and instead, we look at the core of things, what they do, and how they work, with only the ten hundred simple words. This way of seeing peels back the layers of fancy talk, showing the true shapes and movements of the things around us.
You find yourself looking at many pictures, like building plans, but for everyday objects and the giant forces of the world. These pictures are clear and show the parts of each thing, with lines pointing to what each piece does. There are no long names, no confusing words that only a few people know. Just simple words that everyone understands, telling you what makes the thing move, what makes it bright, or what makes it stop.
Consider the simple tools that help us live. There are the "food-heating radio boxes" that warm your meal with unseen waves, making things hot without fire. You might see the "writing sticks" that leave marks on paper, or the "picture takers" that hold moments of light and color forever. Each one, laid bare, shows its inner workings, its parts named for their actions rather than their secret, complex labels.
Then, the view gets bigger, moving from the things you hold to the great structures we build and the vast places beyond our reach. You can see the "tall roads" that let us cross water, held up by strong parts. Or perhaps the "shared space house," a home far above the Earth where people live and work among the stars. It's all broken down, piece by piece, so you can see the air cleaners, the power makers, and the parts that keep it all safe.
Even the ground beneath your feet takes on a new clarity. The "big flat rocks we live on" are shown as moving pieces, slowly pushing and pulling, making the land change over long stretches of time. You learn about the "pieces everything is made of," the tiny bits that build up all matter, each with its own place in a big table. And inside you, the "little bags of water" that make up your body are revealed, each with its own job to do.
This journey of understanding is not just about knowing what things are, but truly seeing how they act. It's about the joy of realizing that the world, with all its amazing machines and natural wonders, isn't really that hard to grasp. When you strip away the big words, the simple truth of how things work shines through, often with a quiet humor in the unexpected names given to familiar ideas.
So, you look at a "sky boat with turning wings" and learn how it lifts itself into the air, or how the "sky boat pushers" make a plane fly fast. It's a way of thinking that makes you look closer at everything, to ask not "what is it called?" but "what does it do?" This fresh, clear sight leaves you with a deep sense of wonder and a new way to talk about the complicated stuff, making it all simple.