The Planet Where Water Flows Upwards
Bedtime story

The Planet Where Water Flows Upwards

~2 min readFree

# The Planet Where Water Flows Upwards

Far beyond the reach of ordinary telescopes and imagination, there existed a planet called Aquaria, where the most extraordinary thing happened: water flowed upwards.

On Aquaria, raindrops didn't fall from the sky—they rose from the ground. Rivers began in the valleys and climbed toward the mountaintops, sparkling like liquid diamonds against the twilight. Waterfalls cascaded in reverse, shooting upward from rocky cliffs into clouds that hovered just above the treetops.

The people of Aquaria, called Aquarians, had adapted beautifully to this inverted world. They built their homes upside-down, with roofs touching the earth and foundations reaching toward the sky. Their gardens grew from ceilings, and they harvested rain from the ground below, collecting the rising droplets in bowls turned bottom-up.

Little Lira was a curious Aquarian child who loved to watch the water dance upward. Every morning, she would sit by the Silver Stream and dip her toes into the current, feeling the gentle pull against gravity as the water tickled her skin and rose toward the lavender clouds above.

"Why does water flow upward here, Mother?" Lira asked one evening as they collected dew from the grass—which was actually rising mist that had begun its journey from underground springs.

Her mother smiled, her silver hair floating weightlessly in the humid air. "Long ago, when the universe was young, Aquaria was just like any other planet. Water fell down, crops struggled in drought, and the people suffered. But a kind water spirit named Marina saw their hardship and made a wish upon a shooting star. She asked that water might reach the sky more easily, to nourish the clouds and bring balance to the world."

"The star granted her wish," her mother continued, "and from that day forward, water on Aquaria flows toward the heavens instead of away from them. The clouds are always full, the air is always fresh, and our planet never knows drought or thirst."

Lira listened with wonder, imagining the brave spirit Marina making her selfless wish. "Does that mean we're closer to the stars here?" she asked.

"In a way, yes," her mother replied. "Every drop of water that rises carries a little piece of our world toward the sky. Some say that's why our nights are so bright—because the water brings starlight down to us as it travels up."

That night, Lira dreamed of Marina, the water spirit with hair like flowing rivers and eyes like deep ocean pools. In her dream, Marina danced among the rising waterfalls, laughing as droplets spiraled around her like tiny moons.

When Lira woke, she understood something important: Aquaria was special not because its water defied gravity, but because it reminded everyone that sometimes, the most beautiful things happen when you go against what's expected.

Years later, when Lira became a mother herself, she told the same story to her own children, sitting by the Silver Stream as water flowed upward around them, carrying their laughter toward the stars.

And somewhere in the cosmos, Marina smiled, knowing her wish had created more than just a different flow of water—it had created a world where wonder never dried up.