Mother:
Do you see how the air outside looks still, but it’s actually moving all the time?
Isha:
Mm.
Mother:
Space is like that too.
The Sun is constantly sending things outward — not just light, but particles.
Tiny pieces of itself. That movement is called the solar wind.
Isha:
Is it hot?
Mother:
Very. And fast.
The Sun throws Helium into space, and the solar wind carries it for millions of miles.
It doesn’t stop at planets. It keeps going — past edges we can’t even see.
Isha:
Does it get lost?
Mother:
No.
Helium doesn’t react much with anything.
It doesn’t cling. It doesn’t break apart easily.
So it can travel really far without changing what it is.
Isha:
So it just… goes?
Mother:
Yes.
And Sagittarius is like that too.
It’s the part of us that wants to understand what’s beyond where we’re standing.
Not to escape — but to see farther.
Isha:
What does Helium see?
Mother:
Everything it passes through.
Magnetic fields. Empty space. Other stars.
It moves through invisible oceans that hold the universe together.
Isha:
I like that.
Mother:
Me too.
It reminds me that just because we can’t see something
doesn’t mean it isn’t real — or moving — or shaping us.
Together:
I See Helium.
I See the invisible oceans of the universe.
❤️✨