Kaspa Bunny on Lala's Room

Table of contents

On a perfectly ordinary morning, a teal-colored bunny named Kasbun sat quietly in the corner of a little girl’s bedroom. He wasn't a superhero. He wasn’t even a real rabbit. He was just... a plush toy.
But somehow, today felt different.
The air seemed to whisper.
A Britney Spears poster on the wall wobbled a bit.
A Barbie doll slightly turned her head.
And the old TV in the corner—turned off just moments ago—suddenly lit up, playing Barbie & Friends.
Kasbun?
Still sitting. Still silent.
But somewhere deep in his mind (or stuffing?), a voice whispered:
“Today… we’ll learn something very important.”
Kasbun couldn’t reply, of course.
But you can.
Because this story isn’t about the bunny.
It’s about children’s worlds — and the small messes that grown-ups ignore…
Even though those messes? That’s where the real stories begin.
That day, the big bedroom filled with Leonardo DiCaprio posters and piles of Barbie dolls was… a complete disaster.
The prom dress? Nowhere to be found.
Children’s magazines stacked like unstable towers.
A random eyeliner stuck to the tail of a teddy bear.
And the room’s owner — a little girl named Lala — was in a total panic. 😱
“Oh no! Where’s my pink dress?! I need to look perfect! I have to be ready! I—”
💥 THUMP!!
She slipped… on her own clothes.
In the corner, Kasbun just sat there.
His eyes (one round, one star-shaped) stared at Lala, as if saying:
“Didn’t you throw your dress there yesterday?”
But of course… he’s just a plush toy. He can’t talk.
Or… can’t always talk.
Lala groaned, sitting on the floor, and mumbled,
“I hate mornings like this! Why is everything a mess? Why does everything go wrong?”
The truth was simple:
📌 Lala didn’t notice the tiny chaos she created every single day.
Lala sat on the floor, staring at the stiff, silent Kasbun.
“Why didn’t you help me?” she asked.
Of course, Kasbun didn’t reply. But something inside Lala’s head began to think on its own. 🤯
She looked around...
Unmade bed.
Pile of dirty clothes.
Memory board with photos about to fall.
Her vanity table looked like a glitter storm hit it.
And right in the middle of it all… she realized:
“Maybe… this mess didn’t just appear. Maybe I’ve been secretly making things harder for myself all along.”
🌱 That’s the seed of awareness.
Simple, yet powerful.
Many children — and even adults — don’t realize that problems aren’t always from the outside… but often come from our own habits.
Lala sighed. She slowly walked to her mirror and stared at her reflection.
“I just wanted everything to be perfect… but now it’s a mess.”
She spoke quietly. To herself. To the mess.
And maybe… to Kasbun, too.
📍 Problems come from many places:
From expectations that are too high, without knowing how to reach them.
From neglecting daily habits, letting things pile up.
From being afraid to ask for help.
From blaming everything else, instead of starting from within.
At that moment… Kasbun (or maybe just Lala’s imagination of him) whispered in her heart:
“Problems aren’t enemies. They’re teachers. But you have to be brave enough to look them in the face.”
In the days before, Lala was too busy trying to be perfect.
Prom night. Pretty photos. Fancy dresses.
But all of that made her forget to tidy up the little things.
Kasbun was still quietly sitting in the corner.
But his voice — or maybe it’s just this narrator 😏 — started speaking more clearly:
“If you don’t plant flowers... thorny weeds will grow instead.”
🌵 The roots of problems don’t grow overnight.
They grow when you say “I’ll do it later.”
They grow when you say “It’s not important.”
They grow when you say “Everything’s fine” — when it isn’t.
And most often?
📌 They grow behind a fake smile.
Before Lala’s room became a mess…
📅 She once promised herself: “I’ll clean it tomorrow!”
But tomorrow always turned into next week.
Before she slipped on her clothes…
👗 She knew they were on the floor. But she thought:
“It’s just for a bit… I know where everything is.”
Before she cried…
💭 She had already felt tired, but never said it.
She believed good kids aren’t supposed to complain.
And after everything exploded…
💔 All that was left was confusion, frustration, and shame.
Kasbun was still sitting in his corner. But now,
his starry eye seemed to say:
“Problems left alone… always become a drama.” 🎭
Lala’s problem wasn’t just the messy room.
It was also about the little things piling up.
📌 Visible causes:
Clothes everywhere.
Messy schedule.
Vanity table like a warzone.
Toys never cleaned up.
📌 Invisible causes:
Lala wanted to be perfect.
She was afraid of being called clumsy.
She didn’t know how to ask for help.
She thought, “If I fail, my parents will be disappointed.”
Children’s problems aren’t usually because they’re bad...
But because they don’t yet know how to speak honestly about what they feel.
Kasbun still sat silently. But now, Lala’s imagination projected his voice:
“You’re not wrong, Lala… You just haven’t had the chance to learn yet.” 🧸✨
“What do I do now…?” Lala whispered, staring at the ceiling.
Then she looked at Kasbun — still quietly sitting in his usual pose.
But this time… Lala didn’t need an answer. She needed a decision.
Because sometimes...
✅ Problems have clear solutions:
Pick up a broom.
Fold the clothes.
Organize the schedule.
Be honest with your parents.
But sometimes...
❌ Problems don’t have instant fixes:
Fear.
Disappointment in yourself.
Not knowing where to start.
And this is the greatest lesson for children:
“If you don’t know what to do… just begin with what you can do.”
💡 One small step — that’s enough.
Lala slowly stood up and grabbed a piece of paper from her study desk.
She wrote:
“The first thing I can do today: FOLD CLOTHES.” 👕📝
She stuck the paper on her wall — right below her Leonardo DiCaprio poster.
Then looked at Kasbun.
“If I mess up, it’s your fault, okay?” she joked with a smile. 😄
But… she began.
✨ That was when Lala discovered something:
Not a magical tool.
Not a fancy app.
But… the power to begin.
Many children feel like their problems are too big.
When in truth, they just haven’t realized that the greatest power is simple:
🎯 The will to move one step better than yesterday.
After folding a few clothes, Lala sat on the floor again — this time not because she slipped, but because she was thinking. 🤔
“I need a plan…” she muttered.
She grabbed a notebook with a unicorn cover.
Then started drawing boxes with a title:
📒 Lala’s Action Plan:
Organize clothes and shoes.
Clean vanity table (glitter warning!).
Sleep earlier.
Be honest when needing help.
Reread things that bring joy (including old comics).
And at the bottom corner of the page, she scribbled:
“Kasbun says: You don’t need to be great — just be willing.” 🐰
Lala stared at her little action plan.
She realized: she didn’t need to finish everything today.
What mattered was the order. The direction. 🧭
She split her problems into two:
🟡 Outer Problems (Visible):
Messy room
Disorganized schedule
Vanity table disaster zone
🔵 Inner Problems (Hidden):
Fear of failure
Desire for perfection
Fear of being scolded
She marked:
“Start with what I can see… the inside will follow.”
Because when you clean the outside world,
you’re also gently cleaning your inside world. 💖
Kasbun still sat in silence. But now, somehow… he looked more alive.
As if he knew… Lala was just a bit stronger than she was yesterday.
Lala opened the window. Sunlight poured into the room that was still messy… but no longer chaotic.
A small change. But a real one. 🌤️
Here’s the simple guide — from Lala (and Kasbun of course) — to solve problems from start to finish:
🟢 1. Realize there's a problem.
Sometimes, we need to fall before we notice.
🟢 2. Be honest about the cause.
Not to blame, but to understand.
🟢 3. Break the problem into smaller pieces.
Big problems are just small ones waiting to be sorted.
🟢 4. Make a simple plan.
Write it. Draw it. Stick it on your wall. Whatever works.
🟢 5. Take one small step first.
One folded shirt. One honest word.
🟢 6. Repeat, even slowly.
Problems are stubborn. But you're more patient than them.
🟢 7. Appreciate yourself.
Hug Kasbun. Hug yourself. You’re amazing. 🤗
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