Is Keir Starmer Really Going To Arrest...
News5 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by kelfoan. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My first idea would have been to say:
There are tiny little red balloons in the blood.
However, the balloons are so tiny, you cannot see them with your eyes.
Then show him an enlarged picture of red blood cells.
I believe that staying closest to the truth is always best, and at five years old, children are not stupid and often don't take well to being lied to, or being told stupid stories, once they find out.
So I definitely would NOT go with the first suggestion.
I know you didn't want a technical answer, but p'raps you could pick out a few ideas from this link, giving your son a simple honest answer.
Good luck.
My son asked me why the sky was blue at about 3 and was then completely unimpressed with my answer involving pixies and tins of left over blue paint and no green left! So his dad who is far better at explaining about defraction of light and other such things told him the real reason which he thought was so cool. Now he is 13 and working 2 levels ahead of his peers at science and enjoys surfing the net for physics sites and discussing lots of sciency things with his dad! My daughter was far more impressed with the pixies! Great at english still ok at science! So take your choice!
Good luck Mel
P.S. The Magic Schoolbus books are great for simple explinations that me and my daughter can understand!
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