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Leo scoffed. He spent thirty minutes building a "government" of pieces, barricading himself behind a wall of knights, shouting, (Welcome to the government seat!) as if inviting a challenge he knew he could win. He was so busy protecting his "seat" and making sure nobody could "hit" his position that he didn't notice his grandfather was simply placing colorful garden tiles on the other side of the board.

"I won," Leo insisted, though his voice wavered. "I have the government seat. Nobody touched me."

One afternoon, Leo found an old, dusty board game in the attic called The Silent Kingdom . He invited his grandfather to play, determined to crush him. As they set up the pieces, Leo started his usual routine: "I’m going to take the castle first, and you can’t stop me. I’m the best at strategy!" zapraszam_na_rzadowy_nie_bedziecie_mnie_bili_na...

By the end of the hour, Leo had a fortress, but he was sitting all alone in the corner of the board. His grandfather had built a beautiful park where all the other pieces—the commoners, the travelers, even the dragons—were gathered for a feast.

Leo slowly reached out and knocked down one of his own walls. "Okay," he whispered. "Maybe the government seat is a bit lonely today. Can my knights come to the feast?" Leo scoffed

Leo lived in a world where everything was a competition. At school, he had to have the fastest pencil; at home, he had to have the biggest slice of pie. He spent so much time defending his "territory" that his favorite catchphrase became,

His grandfather just smiled and moved a small wooden pawn. "In this game, Leo, the winner isn't the one who takes the most territory. The winner is the one who keeps the peace the longest." "I won," Leo insisted, though his voice wavered

"You did," his grandfather agreed softly. "You built a wall so high that no one could get in to play with you. You kept your seat, but you lost the game."