What Uno Teaches Us About Growing Up (And He’s Just a Puppy)

Uno isn’t trying to teach anything. He is just curious or observing.

He’s not thinking about emotions.
He’s not labeling feelings.

He’s just… being a puppy. Puppies investigate their environment using their sense of smell, sight, touch, and taste. They use hearing differently. If something fall, they are out of there like a light.

And somehow, that’s exactly why children understand him. Children do the same things. They put everything in their mouths. You have to be watchful for that. They touch everything that looks interesting. Hence the need to cover sockets and lock cabinets, they are curious just like UNO.


Puppies and Children Aren’t That Different

There’s something people don’t always realize:

Puppies develop emotionally in ways that look a lot like young children.

Not exactly the same—but close enough that you can see it.

You’ll notice it if you slow down. In this series, we will highlight some of the things that you may see in your child through stories of Uno. Uno experience loud emotions and he uses his dad’s strength and become Unhinged Tank. Unhinged Tank is an imaginary alter ego that Uno developed, and children develop imaginary friends, as well.


Uno Wants to Be Close

Uno follows.

He leans in.
He watches closely.
He stays near—even when he doesn’t fully understand what’s happening.

That’s not random.

That’s connection.

Children do the same thing when they’re trying to feel safe.


Uno Plays… Until He Doesn’t

One minute, he’s full energy.

Running. Jumping. Engaged.

The next?

He pulls back.
Sits still.
Watches instead of joining.

That shift matters.

Because just like kids, puppies use play to process, and pause to regulate.


Uno Notices Everything

Before Uno reacts, he watches.

  • Who’s moving closer
  • Who’s stepping away
  • Who’s looking at him
  • Who isn’t

He doesn’t have words for it.

But he’s reading the room.


Uno Feels “Left Out” Without Saying It

There are moments where Uno doesn’t move.

Not because he can’t—
but because he’s unsure.

You’ll see it in:

  • His eyes staying fixed
  • His body leaning but not stepping
  • The space between him and others staying the same

No one says, “He feels left out.”

But you can see it.

And children see it too.


Why Kids Connect to Uno So Easily

Because Uno isn’t explaining himself.

He’s showing.

Children don’t need a definition to understand:

  • Wanting to belong
  • Not knowing if it’s okay to come closer
  • Feeling excited and unsure at the same time

They’ve already felt that.


Uno Learns Through Experience—Just Like Kids

He doesn’t get it right the first time.

He learns by:

  • Trying
  • Pausing
  • Watching
  • Trying again

There’s no lecture.

Just experience.


The Quiet Truth About Uno

Uno isn’t special because he’s different.

He’s special because he’s familiar.


The way he watches.
The way he waits.
The way he wants to be chosen.

That’s not just puppy behavior.

That’s growing up.


Final Thought

If you really pay attention, Uno will show you something simple:

You don’t have to teach children emotions first.

They’re already living them.

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