Friday, February 22, 2019

Choosing and Chosen

Billy enjoyed taking the photo of Mandy and Bella when Bella was visiting.



Billy would like to take more photos. He needed a camera he could use all the time. He looked for one online, but he is small. The cameras are all too big for him and cost more than what he had saved up. Billy had an idea. He asked for the use of a discarded phone that takes photos. He asked nicely and had good reasons for wanting the phone, so we gave it to him. He can use it to take photos and send them to the computer.

The first thing he did was take photos of his dog, Freckles, on the dog bed.



Then he took photos of his sisters doing things and posing for him. He took this one of Mandy and Veronika planning a tea party.



He took this photo of Mandy and Jolena looking at a photograph album.



Because he didn't have to pay for a camera, he used his savings to buy a tripod. That's a kind of stand that will hold a camera or a phone so it doesn't jiggle when you take a photo.




Now he can take photos without holding the phone. He can even take photos of himself, like this one, using the timer on the phone. He aimed the phone so that where he planned to sit was on the screen. He set the timer for ten seconds. Then he ran and climbed up on the window sill. The phone took his photo when the ten seconds were up.



He took lots and lots of photos and sent them to the computer. Some were good and some were not so good. Sometimes he found mistakes in the photos only after he saw them on the computer. He has learned that you have to pay attention to what might be behind dolls when you take photos of them, like these cooking spoons on the bench behind Charlotte.



Billy has learned that you have to notice where the light is coming from, so you can see the doll whose photo you are taking. It was hard to see Mariah's face when the light came from behind her.




He has taught himself how to pick the best photos and how to use the computer to fix them so they look even better. 

One day, Billy asked Veronika and Mandy if he could make a portrait of them in some nice clothes. They thought it was a fun idea, so they looked through the clothes together to decide what to wear. 



Veronika and Mandy washed their faces and put on the outfits they had chosen. Then they brushed their hair. Well, they brushed Mandy's hair. Veronika's hair doesn't need much care.

When the girls were ready, Billy found a place for them to stand where there wouldn't be anything else to see, so the photo would only be about the two dolls. There were no cooking spoons sticking up. The light was good. Billy told Veronika and Mandy where to stand. 



Billy talked to the girls while he took photos. He made little jokes that made them giggle, so he could get them to smile. It isn't easy for them to smile, because their mouths don't move.

When he decided he had taken enough photos, Billy sent them to the computer. He chose the photo he liked best and cropped it. That means he cut off some of the outside edges of the photo. He lightened up the picture a bit, so their beautiful faces were clear. He used the computer to make the edges and corners fuzzy just because he thought it was pretty that way.



While Billy was working on the photo he had chosen, Veronika climbed up to see what he was doing with the computer. "Wow, Billy!" she said, looking at the photo on the screen. "You're good at this!"



"Do you think so?" Billy asked. "I thought I was only good at using my sled and throwing a ball."




"You do many things well, Billy," Veronika pointed out. "You are fun to be with, and you listen to what other dolls are saying. You know how to put things together, how to play games and how to take turns. You can solve problems. You know how to work with other dolls, too, and you are good at being kind."



Jolena heard Billy's and Veronika's voices from the next room. She came to find out what they were doing. She climbed up to where Billy was working, so she could see.



"Where did you find that photo, Billy?" Jolena asked.
"I took a lot of photos with the phone," he explained. "Then I sent them to the computer and looked at them. I thought this one was the best, so I fixed it to make it look even better."



"It must have taken a lot of work to learn how to do this," Jolena said.
"It isn't work," Billy replied. "It's fun!"



"Work can be fun," Veronika explained. "Just because you're doing something useful or learning how to do something that's hard, doesn't mean it can't be fun."



"That's how cooking is for me," Jolena agreed. "Cooking is useful, so you could call it work, but to me it's fun, and I'm good at it. It's my superpower. Billy, I think taking photos, choosing the best ones and making them even better is your superpower!"



"I have been worried that I would never find anything useful I could do well, but this is easy, and it's something I like to do," Billy told them. "I hope it's useful."



"This is useful! Now you can take photos for our stories!" exclaimed Veronika.



Billy was very still for a while. Then he took a big breath and looked up at the ceiling. Veronika thought he was trying to think how to say something very important.



"You have made me feel much better," Billy said. "When I came here, I didn't think I could be really good at anything useful. I think it's a big responsibility, being in stories that teach children about how the world works and how to be kind to each other, and how to feel good about who they are. I didn't think I would be good enough."
"Billy, you wouldn't have been called to do this if you couldn't do it," Veronika pointed out. "When you're called to do something important and good, you should trust that it's because you're the right one for the job."



"Yes," agreed Jolena. "Our writer chose you because you were the right one for the stories. All of us were very carefully chosen because we were needed," she added. "It's just like when you choose the photos that work best for what you want from all the ones you've taken."



"I thought I was picked because I was a boy," Billy said.



"Well, that's true, too," Veronika agreed. "We needed a boy. All boys and girls are special, but you're the boy we needed."



That made Billy very happy. He knew his sisters were honest. They would never lie, even to make him feel better, so it must be true. He thought about that, and it made him smile.



"I have an idea," Billy said, "Let's take a group photo with all the dolls together. I can set the timer on my camera, so I can be in the photo, too," he explained to them. 

Billy called all his sisters to come. He arranged them on the steps, because he said it's easier to get them all in the photo if the dolls in front are lower than the dolls in back. That way, no one is hidden behind someone else. Then he set up his tripod. He had to make the legs longer, so his phone camera would be high enough to take the photo he wanted, but they are easy to adjust.



The dolls posed. Billy set the timer. Then he ran and sat down in front of his sisters. He took several photos, but not because someone blinked. (These dolls don't blink because their eyes don't close.) No, he had to take a few photos before the girls stopped being silly. He wanted them to look happy, but not silly. He checked each photo on the screen. When he was sure he had some good ones, Billy sent the photos to the computer. He chose the one he liked best. It was a photo where no one was being silly. Then he fixed it and made it even better. This is the photo Billy chose after he made it look its best.



Billy is smiling in the photo. He is happy because he has found something to do that is fun and useful.

Cast--
Billy: Götz Happy Kidz Lily at London
Mandy: Götz Happy Kidz Katie 2015
Veronika: Götz Classic Kidz Vroni
Charlotte: Götz Happy Kidz Anna in Paris
Jolena: Götz Happy Kidz Lena in Aspen
Mariah: Götz Happy Kidz Mariah, "Chosen" from My Doll Best Friend

Note: No dolls ere harmed during production of this blog. All dolls shows are Gotz Happy Kidz or Classic Kidz. If you like these stories and are willing, please make a donation of any amount to a charity that supports pediatric cancer, such as CURE Childhood Cancer or St. Baldrick's Foundation.
"The Doll's Storybook" is not affiliated with Gotz Dolls USA Inc. or Götz Puppenmanufaktur International GmbH.
Watch for the next story each Friday afternoon at 2:00 PM Pacific Time.

Copyright © 2019 by Peggy Stuart

Friday, February 15, 2019

Meeting the Elephant

Mandy looked up from her knitting when Jolena, Charlotte and Mariah came into the room.



"Mandy, we have a question we thought you might help us with," Charlotte said. The other two dolls nodded. "We celebrate each other's special holidays. All of you celebrated Hanukkah with me, and then Mariah and I celebrated Christmas with you, Veronika, Jolena and Billy."




"Yes," Mariah said, "and we all have special holidays in April. We know we will celebrate those special days together, too."



"We know that all these special days have something to do with what we believe about God," Jolena said. "What we don't understand is, why don't all dolls believe the same thing?"



Mandy took off her glasses and put them on top of her head, so they knew she would have a lot to say.



"I can give you my opinion," Mandy said, "but this is something that no one knows for sure. If you asked a question about science (sigh-ence)," Mandy said clearly for them, "I could give you an answer that I know, or we could look it up and find out. This isn't science, though; it's something called religion." She pronounced it again carefully for them, "Ree-lih-juhn. It isn't about what we know for sure and can prove, but what we believe to be true."



Mandy thought for a minute. "I think the best way to explain what I think is to tell you a story I read once," she said.




The dolls love stories, so they settled down to listen to Mandy.




Here is the story Mandy told the other dolls:

Once upon a time, in the Land of the Dolls, there was a magical elephant. All the dolls in the land wanted to find out about the magical elephant. They came from all over the Land of the Dolls to learn what they could. They brought their sleep masks with them, because they had heard that no one was allowed to see this wonderful being.



Only one doll at a time was allowed to go into the room where the magical elephant was, so they waited patiently for their turns. (Dolls are good at being patient.) When each doll went into the room, she or he had to feel around to find the elephant.
Some of the dolls touched the elephant's side. "This feels like a wall," they would say. "The magical elephant is like a wall."



Some of the dolls touched one of the tusks of the wonderful creature. "This is very sharp, like a knife," they said. "The magical elephant is like a knife."




Other dolls found the trunk first. "Ooooo, the creature is like a snake," they would say to themselves.




Some of the other dolls found one of the legs. Those dolls decided that the elephant was like a tree.




Still more dolls found the tail. "Clearly, the magical elephant is a kind of rope," they said.




Other dolls touched the ear. "This creature must be some kind of fan," they thought.




There were even some dolls who felt around in the room and never found the elephant at all. They said, "I don't think there really is a magical elephant. I couldn't find one."

Each doll was sure she or he knew the truth and that the other dolls were wrong.




Most dolls like to discuss things, but they don't like to argue, because they know they are supposed to set a good example for the children they live with, so they decided that it was fine that they all believed different things.




This made all the dolls happy, even though they didn't know everything there was to know about the magical elephant.

"So in a way, all the dolls were right," Jolena said.




"They just didn't know all of it,"Mariah said, "so they thought the others were wrong."




"I see the point of the story," Charlotte said. "The magical elephant is like God, and dolls believe different things because they only see part of what God is like."




"Yes," Mandy said, "but that is just what I believe. We all experience God through our own religions, and some dolls don't experience God at all, but there is no way to be sure that what you know in your heart as true is really the whole story."
"Why is that?" Mariah asked.




"We can prove many things," Mandy explained. "There are things we know that help us know ahead of time what will happen," she said.




"This is where science comes in," Mandy continued. "We use science to learn about the world, and we can use what we have learned to know within a few days when it will rain, or what medicine will cure an illness, or what time the sun will rise in the morning."




"What we know in our hearts but can't prove is called belief," Mandy said. "That's what religion is. If someone believes differently from you, it doesn't make what you believe wrong, just different."




"I think things that are different are interesting," Jolena said, "but I like going to my church on Sunday."




"Yes," said Mandy, "So do I. But Mariah goes to a place called a mosque (mosk) on Friday, and Charlotte goes to a place called a synagogue (sin-a-gog) on Saturday. What I believe is that we are all learning about and worshiping the same God, whether in church, in a mosque or in a synagogue, and the familiar words and music help us with that."
"I like going to the mosque," Mariah said. "I like to pray there with others who believe the way I do."




"I like my synagogue," said Charlotte. "I learn something new every time."




"What about the dolls in the story who never found the elephant? Do some dolls not believe in God?" Jolena asked. 




"Some don't, and I think that's fine. It's something each doll has to decide alone," Mandy said. "No one can make you believe something you don't. You may change how you believe because of what happens to you in life, but your beliefs are your own. Most dolls believe in The Doll Code, though. That's the rule we have that we must be kind to each other, look after dolls in need and set a good example for the children in our lives."
"I've learned we need to set a good example for each other, too," Mariah said.
Mariah and Jolena stood up, and the three dolls got ready to go. Mandy looked around at them. "I have a wonderful doll family," she added with a sigh. "You prove it to me every day, so that's not a belief; that's a fact!"






Cast--
Mandy: Götz Happy Kidz Katie 2015
Charlotte: Götz Happy Kidz Anna in Paris
Jolena: Götz Happy Kidz Lena in Aspen
Mariah: Götz Happy Kidz Mariah, "Chosen" from My Doll Best Friend
Veronika: Götz Classic Kidz Vroni
Billy: Götz Happy Kidz Lily at London
Magical Elephant: Himself

Special note from the author: Mandy's story is based on the parable of the six blind men and the elephant, which originated in ancient times on the Indian subcontinent. It was popularized in the English-speaking world through a poem by John Godfrey Saxe.

Note: No dolls were harmed during production of this blog. All dolls shown are Götz Happy Kidz or Classic Kidz. If you like these stories and are willing, please make a donation of any amount to a charity that supports pediatric cancer, such as CURE Childhood Cancer or St. Baldrick's Foundation.
"The Doll's Storybook" is not affiliated with Gotz Dolls USA Inc. or Götz Puppenmanufaktur International GmbH.

Watch for the next story each Friday afternoon at 2:00 PM Pacific Time.

Copyright © 2019 by Peggy Stuart

Good Friends

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