Showing posts with label Book Baby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Baby. Show all posts

Friday, January 16, 2026

What's Behind the Door?

Pippa joined us in 2020. This is one of her early adventures.

"What are you doing up there, Pippa?" Mariah called up from where she was standing by the bathroom door.

Pippa peeked over the edge of the counter. "I'm checking out what's in the cabinets here," she said.

"How did you get up there?" Mariah called up to her.

"Right here," Pippa said, pointing to the drawers in the lower cabinet. "I used the drawers and their handles to climb up. It was easy."

Mariah looked at how Pippa had climbed up. "You little monkey!" she exclaimed. "I don't know if I can get up there from here."

Mariah is not very big, but she's bigger than Pippa. She had to pull out each drawer a bit to climb on.

"It turns out," Pippa said, when Mariah had reached the top of the counter, "I'm pretty good at climbing."

"I thought you must have sprouted wings," Mariah said. "Now, tell me, what are you doing in the cabinets?"

"Well," Pippa began, "I remembered how Emil said that sometimes you look in the drawers and cabinets when the old people are away. I thought this cabinet on the wall looked interesting."

Mariah looked up where Pippa was pointing. "That's the medicine cabinet," she said.

"Well," Pippa said again, "I decided to check out what's in it. I found lots of interesting bottles and things." 

Pippa pointed to an assortment of bottles on the countertop. "I found all this!" she explained.

Mariah looked at all the things Pippa had pulled out of the cabinet. "You know," she said, "these things are mostly medicines."

"Yes!" Pippa agreed. "They're interesting! Smell this!" Pippa took the cap off of a bottle of blue liquid. "This stuff smells yummy!"

Mariah took a sniff of what was in the bottle. "Yes," she said. "It does smell yummy, but we have to be very careful with these things."

"I know!" Pippa said. "They don't belong to us! I'm going to put them all back." She put the cap back on the bottle.

"It isn't just that," Mariah said. "We shouldn't mess with things that don't belong to us, but some of these things could make a child very sick. Children should not take things from the medicine cabinet, and especially they shouldn't eat or drink any of it. Not only that, but this stuff is mouthwash. People rinse their mouths with it after they brush their teeth, and then they spit it out. They're not supposed to drink it!"

"I didn't think about eating or drinking any of it," Pippa said. "Not even to pretend to!"

"Well," agreed Mariah, as the two dolls sat down on the edge of the counter, "we're dolls, so pretending to eat medicines wouldn't hurt us, except just make us pretend to be sick, but we have to set a good example for the children who read our stories."

"Why do they have these things," Pippa wanted to know, "if they can make them sick?"

"It all depends on what it's for," Mariah said, as Pippa picked up one of the bottles,"but grownup humans know to read the labels. If it says to take two every four hours, for a headache or a tummy ache, that's what they do. If it says not to take it if you're taking some other kind of medicine, they don't."

"Many children know how to read directions," Pippa said, holding out the bottle. "They would know how many pills to take," she added, as Mariah took the bottle from her.

"That's true," agreed Mariah, "but human children have smaller bodies than human grownups. What is safe for a grownup to take might not be safe for a child. Besides, small children might have trouble reading this. The print is very tiny!"

"Children have smaller bodies, like mine?" Pippa asked.

"Not that small," Mariah said. "Even human babies are bigger than you are, Pippa."

Just then, both dolls heard something. 

"It's the garage door!" Mariah exclaimed. "The Writer and her husband are back."

"What do we do?" whispered Pippa.

"Let's just hurry and put everything back where it was," Mariah said.

The dolls worked quickly. Pippa climbed up to where she could reach the medicine cabinet. Mariah handed the bottles up to her, and she put each one away. 

Then they climbed down and closed the drawers, just as they heard the door to the house open. 

They ran to The Writer's workroom and got back to their places on the windowsill, where they had been when the old people left to go out.

After she put away her hat and coat, The Writer went upstairs and into the bathroom to comb her hair. "Sweetie?" she called to her husband. "Did you take my mouthwash out and leave it on the counter?" 

She was sure she had put it away before they left. Hmmmm....sometimes it seemed as if they weren't alone in the house, she thought, as she put the mouthwash away where it belonged. They often found things out of place when they had been out or when they got up in the morning.

The Writer went to the workroom to check on the dolls. Everyone was right where she had left them, but Mariah and Pippa seemed to be looking at the ceiling.

"I wonder what they think about all day," she said to herself as she slowly closed the door to the workroom.



Cast--
Veronika: Götz Classic Kidz Vroni
Mariah: Götz Happy Kidz Mariah, "Chosen" from My Doll Best Friend
Billy: Götz Happy Kidz Lily at London
Emil: Götz Happy Kidz Emilia
Pippa: Götz Little Kidz Lotta


You can follow The Doll's Storybook here.
Do you have questions or comments for us? Would you like to order an autographed copy of one of our books? You can email us at thedollsstorybook@icloud.com.

Note: No dolls were harmed during production of this blog. All dolls shown are Götz Happy Kidz, Classic Kidz or Little Kidz. If you like these stories and are willing, please make a donation of any amount to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital or any organization that supports pediatric cancer research and treatment. We are not affiliated with St. Jude in any way other than these donations.

"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 1:00 PM Pacific Time.

Do you like our stories? Some of them are available in print:

The stories in Mariah: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Being LittleBesties and Distraction.

The stories in Emil: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Best BudsGetting What You Want and The Boys Cook Dinner.

The stories in Classic Tales Retold: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Little Green GreatcoatThe Boy Doll Who Cried Wolf and Lost in the Woods.

Our book of poems, Our Favorite Verses: Poems from The Doll's Storybook includes Valentine's DayKeeping PetsBack to School, Victor the VultureThe Week Before Christmas, Insomnia and Veronika's Vocabulary Verses.

The stories in More Classic Tales Retold: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Welcoming a StrangerThe RescueUnmaskedFuzzy Town––A Play and Sky Blue.

Available now from BookBaby and other booksellers: Billy: Stories from The Doll's Storybook. The Stories in Billy: Stories from The Doll's Storybook are Talking About BoysChangesShhhhh!Staying After and Money in a Jar.


If you don't get free shipping from Amazon or B&N, buy from the BookBabyBookshop, because 50% of the price goes to St. Jude. Other booksellers pay much less, because the vendor gets a cut. The Writer's author's page at Book Baby is here. Scroll down and click on any of the books that interest you. Find our books at Barbara's Bookstore as well, or ask your library to get them for you.

Note: This blog post was produced on the iPad and the MacBook, using the iPhone for some photos and some photo processing. No other computer was used in any stage of composition or posting, and no Windows were opened, waited for, cleaned or broken. No animals or dolls were harmed during the production of this blog post.

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Copyright © 2020, 2023, 2026 by Peggy Stuart

Friday, August 20, 2021

Life on Wheels

Charlotte came into the workroom to put her violin away.

She found Emil reading a letter. She climbed up to where she could talk to him. "Another letter from Holly?" she asked. 

Emil looked up. "Yes," he said. "She's found another new activity she can do with Sam."

Charlotte remembered that Holly was the doll who was in the doll hospital when Emil was there and that Sam was the human girl Holly lives with. Charlotte knew that Holly and Sam both use a wheelchair to get around. She also remembered that Holly was unable to walk, even when no one is watching, and that was why she uses a wheelchair. 

"Wasn't she playing wheelchair basketball?" Charlotte asked. 

Emil nodded and looked back at the letter. "Yes," he said, "and she's still doing that, but she and Sam have found another thing to do together."

"I just finished reading the letter," Emil said, "but if you want, you can read it, too." He handed the letter to Charlotte.

 Charlotte began to read.


Dear Emil, 

You will never guess what Sam and I did this week! We are still playing wheelchair basketball, and I'm getting pretty good in the class for dolls. They have even put me on a team, but we are doing some other interesting things, too.

This week Sam was invited to help with a program that teaches children and older students who can walk what it's like to use a wheelchair to get around. I got to go along. 

We met at the library with the children and their parents. An adult person explained to everyone how the wheelchairs work. Sam and I know all that, of course, but it was interesting to watch the children learn about it.


There was another human person who has to use a wheelchair to get around, like Sam. That person talked about what it was like to need to take a wheelchair everywhere you go. She explained things like how to get yourself and your wheelchair in and out of a car. (That's where being a doll is easy, because Sam takes care of all that for me.)

Sam said a few things about what using a wheelchair is like for her. After Sam and the other human person who uses a wheelchair had talked to the group, they answered questions some of the children had. Then each child received a wheelchair to use for the day. They had some time to practice in the library. That way they could see what it's like when that's how you get around.

Real human children don't have to climb up the bookshelves to get the book they want when no one is looking, the way dolls do.

They just stand on the floor and take the book when they find what they want. It was new for these children to have trouble reaching something up high. 

Getting a drink from the drinking fountain is hard for a human person in a wheelchair unless there is a special drinking fountain. The library didn't have a drinking fountain for dolls, but they had one that was low enough for someone using a wheelchair.


Sam held me up to the special drinking fountain, so I could pretend to get a drink. She had to lift me out of my wheelchair, so she could put my mouth close to the water. No one lifts Sam out of her wheelchair when she needs a drink, and Sam needs to drink water for real, not pretend, so she usually keeps a water bottle with her. It's nice, though, when public places have a drinking fountain she can use.

Sam showed some of the children how to open the door to the restroom. Then she rolled out of the way and let them do it for themselves.

There were other things to learn to do in the restroom, like reaching the soap.


The towels to dry your hands were very high up, too.


Then you have to get out of the restroom! The door opens the other way now, so you have to pull on it and keep your wheelchair out of the way.

Everywhere you go all day long, there are doors. Some are very heavy. Sometimes there's a big button you push, and the door opens for you before you even get close, but when there's no big button, you have to figure out how to open it or get help. Sam told the children that she prefers it if other people only help when she asks. Sometimes people want to be helpful and do things for you that you can do for yourself. She likes to do as much as she can all by herself.

Sam and the other children got to go out to lunch together, and their parents had to deal with getting them into the car and out again, and taking the wheelchairs with them. Everyone had a good time, so it was worth the extra effort.

Sam put me on the table while they ate. She let me pretend to eat some of her lunch.

I got a lot of attention, because most of the children had never seen a doll in a wheelchair before.

I really like that Sam and I got to do this. These children didn't know what it's like for a child or adult in a wheelchair before, and now they do. They have learned that human people who have to use a wheelchair are real people, just like them. Next time they see a person in a wheelchair, they won't stare or be afraid. They understand that all people are different from each other, and this is one way someone can be different.

Thank you for passing along what Jolena told you about the winter sports someone who uses a wheelchair can do, and thank her for me, too. It was very interesting. Maybe I will try some of those things next winter. Tell her good luck at her next ski competition!

I hope you have been having a great summer!

Your friend,

Holly


Charlotte looked up from the letter. "That's really interesting," she said. "I didn't know that real children might be frightened if they see someone who has to use a wheelchair."

"That was a surprise to me, too," Emil agreed. "Why would you be afraid of someone sitting in a chair that rolls?"

"I guess there are lots of things about real children we need to learn," Charlotte said. "For instance, I was just thinking it must be hard for them to have to use a wheelchair if they aren't used to it. They don't have the difficulties all dolls have to deal with, like opening doors and climbing stairs!"

"I think," Emil pointed out, "there are a lot of things about dolls children don't know."

"Yes," Charlotte said. "They probably think we just sit where they left us. Maybe they think we don't do anything all day except wait for them to come home and play with us!"

"Holly certainly doesn't sit around waiting for Sam to come home," Emil agreed. "She does what she enjoys doing, she just uses her wheelchair when she has to move around."

Emil and Charlotte thought about what it must be like to stay all day long right where you were left. Wouldn't that be boring!

Anyone who has read these stories knows that dolls don't just sit where you leave them. They may be right where you left them when you come home, but we know they have been very busy, don't we?

Cast--
Charlotte: Götz Happy Kidz Anna in Paris
Emil: Götz Happy Kidz Emilia
Holly: Götz Little Kidz Lotta

Although this story is a work of fiction, the program described in this story is real. It's called "Come Roll With Me." Find out more hereMany thanks to the Come Roll With Me program at the University of Alabama at Birmingham for allowing us to use some of their photos.

If you want to learn more about Holly's wheelchair basketball and the winter sports Jolena explained, you can read that story here, and here is more information about winter sports for people who use wheelchairs.

You can follow The Doll's Storybook here.
Do you have questions or comments for us? Would you like to order an autographed copy of one of our books? You can email us at thedollsstorybook@icloud.com.

Note: No dolls were harmed during production of this blog. All dolls shown are Götz Happy Kidz, Classic Kidz or Little Kidz. If you like these stories and are willing, please make a donation of any amount to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital or any organization that supports pediatric cancer research and treatment. We are not affiliated with St. Jude in any way other than these donations.

"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 1:00 PM Pacific Time.

Mariah: Stories from The Doll's Storybook, Emil: Stories from The Doll's StorybookClassic Tales Retold: Stories from The Doll's Storybook and Our Favorite Verses: Poems from The Doll's Storybook are available from BookBaby and other booksellers worldwide, such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble
Royalties (net proceeds) go to support pediatric cancer research and treatment. If you don't get free shipping elsewhere, buy from Book Baby. Half of the price goes to charity (specific information available upon request). Autographed copies of all three books are available from the author. (Multiple books to the same address have a discount on shipping.) To inquire, email thedollsstorybook@icloud.com.


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Copyright © 2021, 2024 by Peggy Stuart

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