A dad jokingly tells his 3-year-old that Titanic is “for grown-ups,” which leads to a hilarious misunderstanding at nursery—and a years-long fixation for his son, Max. Soon Max is obsessed with the real ship: building models, asking hard questions, and quietly seeing truths adults miss.
Over chicken nuggets, he calls his parents’ rushed marriage an “iceberg” they didn’t see. That nudge sparks honest conversations and small course-corrections—Friday family time, her painting again—steering the family back toward each other.
Max keeps revealing an old soul: moved to tears at Halifax’s Titanic exhibit, writing “Even the largest ships need to be humble,” comforting lonely neighbors, mentoring peers, and thanking his dad for “staying.” He later studies psychology because “people are like ships.”
On graduation day he gifts his parents their old Titanic DVD with a note: “Thanks for steering me through life.” The lesson lands: don’t outrun your icebergs; slow down, steer with your heart—and never underestimate the quiet wisdom of the kids watching the water.