A True Yunatic
Some minds don’t follow disciplines – they dissolve them. Leonardo da Vinci wasn’t just a painter, inventor, engineer, or anatomist. He was a force of curiosity who treated the world like a living sketchbook.
Self-taught and endlessly driven, he designed machines centuries ahead of their time and painted images that still breathe across generations. Leonardo didn’t see a divide between art and science – he saw them as two hands of the same soul.
“Learn how to see. Realize that everything connects to everything else.” – Leonardo da Vinci
The Inner Child
Leonardo’s inner child never stopped asking questions – Why does the heart move like that? How do birds fly? What’s inside the human body? That child was fascinated by motion, mystery, and beauty and he followed his awe relentlessly, even when it meant dissecting cadavers by candlelight or scribbling backwards in his notebooks to keep his thoughts hidden. He didn’t seek answers to impress – he sought them to understand the nature of wonder.
Tribbles
His tribbles were not just masterpieces – they were seeds of future revolutions:
- The Mona Lisa – A painting so alive it still sparks theories.
- The Last Supper – A frozen moment of tension, perspective and divine drama.
- His notebooks – Packed with flying machines, anatomical sketches, war tech and ideas far beyond his time.
- The Vitruvian Man – Geometry, anatomy and philosophy in one perfect line drawing.

Connected with the Yuniverse
Leonardo didn’t observe the universe – he danced with it. He believed that nature was a code, waiting to be drawn, dissected and decoded. His work was a conversation between intuition and analysis, showing that knowledge itself could be beautiful. He saw in the swirl of a river the same pattern as hair, wind, blood and galaxies.
Is He Spiritual?
His spirituality was expressed through attention, observation and wonder. He believed the divine could be found in proportion, motion and light.
Leonardo da Vinci reminds us that when curiosity and creativity walk hand in hand, you don’t just understand the world – you reimagine it.