Inspirational
Stories
A
story about dots and stickers
The Wemmicks were small wooden people. These little wooden
people were carved by a woodworker named "Eli."
Eli's workshop sat on a hill overlooking the Wemmick Village.
Every
one of the Wemmicks were different. Some had big noses, others
had large eyes. Some were tall and others were short. Some
wore hats, others wore coats. But all were made by the same
carver and all lived in the same village.
All
day long, every day, the Wemmicks did the same thing. They
gave each other stickers. Each Wemmick had a box of golden
star stickers and a box of dull gray dot stickers. Up and
down the streets all over the city, people could be seen sticking
gold stars or gray dots onto each other. The pretty ones,
those with smooth wood and fine paint, always got shiny gold
stars! But if the wood was rough or the paint was chipped,
the Wemmicks gave dull gray dots. The talented ones got stars,
too. Some could lift big sticks high above their heads or
jump over tall boxes. Still others knew big words or could
sing very pretty songs. Everyone gave them shiny gold stars!
Some Wemmicks had stars all over them! Every time they got
a star it made them feel so good that they did something else
and got another star.
There
were many other Wemmicks though that could do very little.
They got dull gray dots! There was one little Wemmick and
his name was "Punchinello." He tried to jump high
like the others, but he always fell. And when he fell, the
others would gather 'round and give him dull gray dots. Sometimes
when he fell, it would scar his wood, so the people would
give him more gray dots. He would try to explain why he fell
and, in doing so, he would say something really silly. Then
the Wemmicks would give him some more dots!!!
After
a while, Punchinello had so many dots that he didn't want
to go outside. He was afraid he would do something dumb such
as forget his hat or step in the water, and then people would
give him more dull gray dots. In fact, he had so many gray
dots that some people would come up and just give him one
without any reason! "He deserves lots of dots,"
they would say. The wooden people would agree with one another.
"He's not a good wooden person," they would say.
After a while Punchinello believed them. "I am not a
good Wemmick!" he would say. The few times he went outside,
he hung around other Wemmicks who had a lot of gray dots.
At least he felt better around them.
One
day, Punchinello met a Wemmick who was unlike any he'd ever
met. She had no dull gray dots and did not have any shiny
golden stars either. She was a wooden Wemmick and her name
was "Lucia." It wasn't that people didn't try to
give her stickers; it's just that the stickers didn't stick
to her!!!
Some
admired Lucia for having no dots, so they would run up and
give her a star. But it would fall off. Some would look down
on her for having no stars, so they would give her a dot.
But they would not stick either!!!
"That's
the way I want to be!" thought Punchinello. "I don't
want anyone's marks!" So he asked the "stickerless"
Wemmick how she did it. "It's easy," Lucia replied.
"Every day I go see Eli." Punchinello asked,"Eli?
Who is Eli?" She replied "Yes, Eli, He is the woodcarver.
I sit in His workshop and spend time with Him." He asked
Lucia,"Why do you do that?" Lucia told him, "Why
don't you find out for yourself? Go up the hill and visit
with Him. He's there!" And with that, the sweet little
Wemmick named Lucia turned and skipped away.
"But
He won't want to see me!" Punchinello cried out to her.
Lucia didn't hear him, as she was too far away. So Punchinello
went home. He sat near a window and watched the wooden people
as they scurried around giving each other gold stars and gray
dots. "It's just not right," he muttered to himself.
Then he resolved to go see Eli after all.
Punchinello
walked up the narrow path to the top of the hill and stepped
into the big Woodcarver Shop. His little wooden eyes widened
at the size of everything. The stool was as tall as he was.
He had to stretch on his tippy-toes to see the top of the
workbench. A hammer was as long as his arm. Punchinello swallowed
hard and thought to himself, "I'm not staying here!"
and he turned to leave. Then he heard his name. "Punchinello?"
said this voice, so deep and strong. Just then Punchinello
stopped. The voice said, "Punchinello, oh how good it
is of you to come! Let me have a look at you."
Punchinello
slowly turned around and looked at the large bearded craftsman
and said, "Sir, you know my name?" "Of course
I do. I made you," Eli said. All of a sudden, Eli stooped
down and picked little Punchinello up and set him on the workbench.
"Hmmmmm," the Maker spoke thoughtfully as he inspected
the gray circles all over him, "Looks like you've been
given some bad marks." Punchinello explained, "Oh,
Eli, I didn't mean to; really I didn't!!! I really tried hard
not to." The Maker said, "Oh, you don't have to
defend yourself to me, my child. I don't care what the other
Wemmicks think." Punchinello asked, "Really? You
don't?" Then Eli said, "No and you shouldn't either.
Who are they to give stars or dots? They are Wemmicks just
like you. What they think really doesn't matter at all, Punchinello.
All that matters is what I think. And I think you are pretty
special."
Punchinello
laughed, "Oh, me special? How can I be special? I can't
walk fast. I can't jump. My paint is peeling. I make silly
mistakes all the time and I am not a beautiful Wemmick like
some of the others. How could I matter to you?" Eli looked
at Punchinello and put his hands on those little wooden shoulders
of his and spoke very slowly, "Because Punchinello...
you are mine. That's why you matter to me." Punchinello
had never had anyone look at him like this before or say anything
so nice, much less his Maker! He didn't know what to say!
"Punchinello,
every day I've been waiting and hoping you would come to see
me," Eli explained. Punchinello looked up at him and
said, "I came because I met a sweet Wemmick girl who
had no marks." Eli said, "I know. Lucia told me
about you." So Punchinello asked, "Why don't the
stickers stay on Lucia?" Eli said, "Because she
has decided that what I think is more important than what
anyone else thinks. The stickers only stick if you let them."
Punchinello looked puzzled and said, "What?" Eli
said, "Yes, the stickers only stick if they matter to
you. The more you trust My love, the less you will care about
those stickers."
But
Punchinello said, "I'm not sure I really understand what
you are saying?" The maker said, "You will, but
it will take some time. You've got a lot of marks. So for
now, just come to see me every day and let me remind you how
much I care about you."
Eli
lifted Punchinello off the bench and set him on the floor.
"Now remember," Eli said as the Wemmick walked out
the door. "You ARE special because I made you, and I
don't make mistakes."
Punchinello
didn't stop, but in his heart he thought, "I think He
really means it." And each time he remembered what Eli
told him and each time he went to visit and talk with Eli,
one of Punchinello's dots would fall off. They kept falling
off and soon they were all gone!!!
So
like Punchinello, it's important for us to remember that while
others may focus on outward appearances, our Creator is only
concerned with what's in our heart.
(May all your dots fall to the ground...)
-
Max Lucado

My
Resignation...
I
am hereby officially tendering my
resignation as an adult. I have decided
I would like to accept the responsibilities
of an 8 year-old.
I
want to go to McDonald's and
think that it's a four star restaurant.
I
want to sail sticks across a fresh mud
puddle and make a sidewalk with rocks.
I
want to think M&Ms are better than money because you can
eat them.
I
want to lie under a big oak tree and run a lemonade stand
with my friends on a hot summer's day.
I
want to return to a time when life was simple; When all you
knew were colors, multiplication tables, and nursery rhymes,
but that didn't bother you, because you didn't know what you
didn't know and you didn't care.
All
you knew was to be happy because you were blissfully unaware
of all the things that should make you worried or upset.
I
want to think the world is fair. That everyone is honest and
good.
I
want to believe that anything is possible. I want to be oblivious
to the complexities of life and be overly excited by the little
things again.
I
want to live simple again. I don't want my day to consist
of computer crashes, mountains of paperwork, depressing news,
how to survive more days in the month than there is money
in the bank, doctor bills, gossip, illness, and loss of loved
ones.
I
want to believe in the power of smiles, hugs, a kind word,
truth, justice, peace, dreams, the imagination, mankind, and
making angels in the snow.
So...
here's my checkbook and my car-keys, my credit card bills
and my 401K statements. I am officially resigning from adulthood.
And
if you want to discuss this further, you'll have to catch
me first, cause........
......"Tag! You're it."
-
Author Unknown
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