Dream
Explanation
The Joke
A child tells their father that they had a dream about a giant monster wolf chasing them. The father excitedly says he had the same dream. The child, being precocious, asks if in the father's dream the wolf was a metaphor for "the unceasing, all-swallowing passage of time." The father responds plainly: "No, just a wolf trying to murder me."
The comic ends with a silhouetted figure remarking, "Ahh, to be young," implying that the father's lack of existential dread in his dreams is actually a sign of youthful innocence, while the child is already burdened with deep metaphorical anxieties about mortality and the passage of time.
The Humor
The joke inverts the expected parent-child dynamic. Normally, children have simple, literal nightmares (a scary wolf chasing them) while adults worry about abstract existential threats. Here, the child is the one interpreting the wolf as a metaphor for time and mortality, while the father's dream is refreshingly literal -- just a wolf trying to kill him. The closing remark, "Ahh, to be young," adds another layer of irony: the father's simple wolf dream is cast as blissfully innocent compared to the child's philosophical anxiety, flipping the usual association of youth with simplicity and age with existential dread.