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Life is a Balloon

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You can look at life as one big balloon. When you are born, it is the first breath into the balloon, and with each day, more air goes in. Consider the ages 0-2, you learn more in those ages than you will in the next several decades, all adding air to the balloon. At this stage, the rubber is tight and resistant; every new word and every scraped knee are struggles to stretch your boundaries further than they were the day before.

When you are born, your whole life is confined to a small area of the home and to your parents or immediate family. As you grow each day, you eventually become old enough for kindergarten or preschool. At this point, your world expands a bit to include new people—more air in the balloon. With this expansion, the balloon’s colors begin to show, vibrant and bright, as the sheer transparency of infancy starts to take on the unique hue of your own personality.

As you grow older and start grade school, your social circle expands to include kids from other neighborhoods, and perhaps the broader community, all adding to the balloon. You begin to realize that the balloon doesn’t grow on its own; it needs your curiosity to keep expanding against the pressure of the world.

Once you hit high school, you may see kids from the whole town, maybe even other towns, and that balloon grows as you experience life. Everything adds to that balloon. Sometimes the balloon hits a rough patch, a thorn, or a jagged edge, and you realize for the first time how fragile the whole thing is. You learn to patch the leaks with resilience, making the surface even tougher than it was before.

Next comes the leap to college or a job. Here, you experience people from other states or countries. Your balloon grows more; in fact, your worldview might start to form more deeply, or even change, as the balloon grows and you gain experiences. The air you put in now isn’t just volume; it is substance. You aren’t just filling space; you are defining the atmosphere you want to live in.

Now the balloon grows; you have hit your stride. You completed school, are working, and have met people from around the world. You control how big your balloon grows by adding the air you choose. This is the era of buoyancy, giving you a vantage point over your past and future.

Eventually, as your career progresses and years pass, the balloon grows more slowly and eventually just holds steady. Steady is good, but as life goes on, air starts to seep out. You hold it back as long as possible. You don’t want to go flat too fast, and each day brings peace, simple joys from a life of learning and growth. This is where you start to look back and wonder whether you put enough breath into that balloon to make it as big as possible. You realize that a large balloon doesn’t just represent a big life, but a slow, graceful descent. The volume you created in your youth becomes the reservoir of peace you draw from now.

The bigger the balloon, the slower it shrinks, but at some point it gets us all. The balloon runs out of air, and all that energy returns to where it came from. We are not sure where that is; maybe we should not know, but it gets us all. But remember, even as the air seeps away, the rubber has been permanently changed; it has been stretched by love, worn by travel, and shaped by every soul you ever let inside. So put as much air in that balloon as you can while you can. Savor the ride, and when the air finally seeps away, know you truly lived.

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About Kevin, I spent 40 years in FinTech before retiring to

Rio de Janeiro to trade software releases for a front-row seat

to the beautiful absurdity of life in Brazil. This blog is my digital

porch, a place for unpolished commentary on book reviews,

daily gripes, and the random thoughts of a guy who finally has

the time to pay attention. I’m an observant realist with a deep

appreciation for history, a good quote, and the perspective that

only comes after the career ends. I write to stay sharp, to stay

honest, and to keep the conversation going.


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  1. […] 3/28/2026: life-is-a-balloon […]

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