There was a little girl who couldn’t stop asking why.
She watched dust dancing in sunlight, drops of water sliding down glass, sparks from her father’s lab tools.
Her questions were endless — and beautiful.
Her parents noticed.
They taught her with books, experiments, and trust — not to quiet her curiosity, but to feed it.
Years later, that same girl — Marie Skłodowska-Curie — became the first person ever to win two Nobel Prizes.
Her discoveries grew from the same soil her parents once tended: a home where asking “why” was never too much.

