Does this analogy for objects and attributes work?
-- An object is like a binder full of pages. When you call the object, Python hands it to you, complete with all of its pages.
An attribute is like a page in that binder, but when you call an attribute, Python reads the page to you, then returns the page to the binder and puts it away.
The data it reads to you is not the page itself, so even if you change it, the page in the binder (object) remains the same.