Showing posts with label diversity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diversity. Show all posts

Friday, August 29, 2025

Mariah's Play

Billy found Mariah in the living room. She appeared to be reading some papers, except she kept looking away from them and mumbling to herself from time to time.


"What are you reading?" he asked her.
"I'm not reading, actually," Mariah explained. "I'm going to be in a play at school. This is the script (SKRIPT). That's the play all written down, with the things the characters say and do all explained."


Billy thought that was interesting. "I didn't know you were in the acting class," he said.
"I'm not in the acting class," Mariah replied. "The teacher who is putting on the play came to my class and asked if I would be in it. She said they really needed me and a few other dolls who are not in the class."


"So what are you doing with the script?" Billy asked.
"I'm studying my lines," Mariah explained. "My lines are what I'm supposed to say. It's my part in the play."
"What's the play about?" Billy asked.


Mariah pointed to her papers. "There are some dolls," she said, "who all look like Veronika and Jolena and have all lived in the same place all their lives. They all believe the same things. They are all girls. In the play, they have a problem they are trying to work out, and they can't figure it out." 


"Then," Mariah went on, "they start talking with some other dolls, dolls who have different faces or different-colored vinyl, like me, some boys, some dolls who come from different places, and dolls who have different beliefs. They get different ideas from the dolls who are different from them."


Mariah explained that the play shows how important it is to have something called diversity (dih-VERS-ih-tee) when you're trying to figure something out or solve a problem or build something new. "Having diversity means having different kinds of dolls in your group," she said.


"Did that help with the problem?" Billy asked.


"It did," Mariah told Billy. "I think why it worked has to do with seeing things differently or having a different point-of-view. If I could just think of an example...."


She thought about that for a few seconds. "I know!" she cried suddenly. "Look at your hand!" she said.


Billy looked.
"What do you see?" Mariah asked.
"I see some jam I didn't get off when I washed my hands after I pretended to eat lunch," Billy said.


"What else?" Mariah asked.
"I see four fingers and a thumb," Bill said.


"Yes!" Mariah exclaimed. "Those four fingers are very much alike. They all come from the same direction. They are very good at what they do and at working together, but even when they work together, there are things they can't do. They are like dolls who are all alike. They are like dolls who all see things the same way."


"It's hard to pick things up with just my fingers," Billy said. "I usually need to use my thumb."


"That's right," Mariah agreed. "Your thumb comes from a different direction. It's able to do different things from the fingers. You have diversity in your hands, because your fingers and thumbs are different from each other. When they work together, they are able to do things they can't do alone."


"There are things that are hard to do with my right hand," Billy said. "I have these two fingers stuck together." Billy held up his right hand for Mariah to see.


"Yes," Mariah agreed. "We all do. It's one of the many ways we're all alike.
"My two hands are different from each other," Billy observed.


"Yes," Mariah said, "and they come from different directions, so you can do things with both hands that would be difficult to do with just one."


"It would be hard for me to pick up and use my camera without my thumbs," Billy agreed, "and I need both hands to set it up to take photos."


"Yes," Mariah concluded, "Your fingers and hands are like the dolls in the play. When they were all just alike they couldn't work out the problem. If you have a problem to solve or a project to work on in a group, it's better to have some dolls who are different from you in your group."
"When will the play be?" Billy asked. "I want to come."


"It's at the end of next month," Mariah said. "We have a lot of rehearsing––that's practicing––to do before then. Would you like to help me learn my lines?"


"What do I do?" Billy asked.
Mariah handed him her papers. "My part is underlined," she explained. "You read me what all the other dolls say except what's underlined. I'll say my part, and if I get stuck and can't remember, you prompt me. That means you tell me the beginning of that line to remind me."


"I'll be your thumb," Billy said. "I'll help you do something you can't do by yourself!"


Mariah agreed Billy was indeed being like a thumb. It was going to be much easier for her to learn her lines with Billy's help.


Cast--

Mariah: Götz Happy Kidz Mariah, "Chosen" from My Doll Best Friend
Billy: Götz Happy Kidz Lily at London
Marmalade: Purrrfect Cats from KTL


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

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

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.

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

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

Coming soon: Billy: Stories from The Doll's Storybook.


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. My author's page at Book Baby is here. Scroll down and click on any of the books that interest you. Find my books at Barbara's Bookstore as well, or ask your local 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, 2025 by Peggy Stuart 

Friday, February 21, 2025

Being Colorblind

"And then she told me she was colorblind," Mariah said as Charlotte shut the front door.

"What is colorblind, anyway?" Charlotte asked when she was sure the door was closed all the way..

"That's a word," Mariah explained, as she adjusted the schoolbooks she was holding, "for when dolls or people don't see colors the same way as everyone else. I think they must be made that way in the factory. Something went wrong, like with Emil and Holly."

"That's interesting," Charlotte said.

"Yes," Mariah agreed. "I looked it up. Dolls who have red-green colorblindness can't tell the difference between red and green."

"That would make it difficult to pick out your favorite kind of apple," Charlotte said thoughtfully.

"Yes," Mariah agreed. "It could make it hard to pick out your clothes, too.

The two friends sat down on the stairs in the front hall. "Then there is the kind of colorblindness where dolls can't tell the difference between yellow and blue," Mariah added.

"Well," Charlotte said. "At least there are no blue apples, but you could still have a problem picking out your clothes." 

"Just imagine," Mariah said, "if Veronika couldn't tell the difference between red and green, or yellow and blue, when she was picking out the cloth for a quilt!"

"The quilt could look ugly," Charlotte agreed, "at least to everyone but Veronika. It's a good thing Veronika isn't colorblind."

"Or Billy!" Mariah exclaimed. "Billy would have a terrible time getting his photos to look right."

"There is a test for each kind of colorblindness," Mariah said. "They show you a picture made up of little circles of the different colors, and you see something in it, like a number or an animal, if you can see those colors."



"Then there are dolls who can't see any color at all," Mariah went on, remembering what she had read, "only dark and light." 

"Life would be like a black-and-white movie," Charlotte said, trying to imagine what that would be like.

"It's too bad Lucy is colorblind," Charlotte said with a sigh. Charlotte enjoys seeing colors, and she has a kind heart. She likes Lucy, too. It would be sad not to see colors.

"But she isn't really colorblind," Mariah said. "It turns out that that wasn't what she meant at all."

"What did she mean, then?" Charlotte asked, puzzled.

"I asked her about it," Mariah explained. "She said she meant she didn't see color when she looks at me. She meant she doesn't think about how I'm a different color from her other friends."

"But you are different!" Charlotte said. "Your vinyl is like a bar of milk chocolate. I know all of Lucy's friends, and none of them are your color. How could she not see that?"

"I think," Mariah said, "that she was trying to say it didn't matter to her that I'm Black."

Charlotte looked at Mariah. She thought she looked a little sad. "That bothers you, doesn't it?" she asked her friend.

"Yes," Mariah agreed. "You see, if it doesn't matter to her that I am the color I am, then she must think there is something wrong with my color, but she likes me anyway."

"I see what you mean," Charlotte agreed. "You wish she thought it was wonderful that you're Black!" 

Mariah nodded.

Charlotte thought about that for a moment.

"But it's wonderful that you're the color you are," she said then. "I remember when Veronika brought you in to meet us when you first came. All I could think of was how beautiful you were!"

"And that was before I knew you," Charlotte went on. "Now that we're best friends, of course, I think you're even more beautiful! I've thought about how I almost didn't meet you! You see, the stories needed you before we knew you, because we didn't have a doll who was a different color," Charlotte explained.

"Before you came," Charlotte said, "The Writer told us that real children come in different colors, so dolls do, too. Real children read our stories, and they like some of the stories to be about dolls who are like them in some ways. Remember when you asked Santa for a doll that looked like you your first Christmas?"

Mariah remembered. She had been so happy when she got the doll she had asked for.

"You see?" Charlotte exclaimed. "If you hadn't been Black, you would not have come to live with us. Then I would not have had you as my best friend!"

Mariah knows this, but she was happy to remember back to when she arrived, and how everyone welcomed her. It made her feel good inside. She thought about how the dolls in her family know all about her now. They see her for who she is. She thought about how they needed her, not just because she was a different color, but because of who she is inside, too. "I'm so glad I got to come to live here," Mariah said. "I'm glad we're best friends, too."

"You know," Charlotte said thoughtfully, "I think Lucy was trying to be nice. Lucy is my color. I think she does see you the way you are, but she has also seen how some of the other dolls at school picked on you at first. She knows it was because someone who doesn't know any better told them that they are better than you are just because of the color of their vinyl. I think she was trying to say she knows that isn't true." 

"Maybe you're right," Mariah agreed. "Lucy and I get along well, and we like a lot of the same things. She's a good friend."

"Yes," Charlotte agreed. "Maybe she just doesn't know how to say what she means in a way that means the same to you, because her experience is different from yours."

"Yes, I can see that," Mariah agreed. "Maybe I didn't understand because my experience is different from hers, too. I'm glad I have you to talk things over with, Charlotte," she added. "You're a good listener, and you're good at figuring things out. I feel better now."

"I'm glad to have you to talk things over with, too, Mariah," Charlotte agreed. "It's good to have you as my best friend." 

Mariah was quiet for a moment. She was thinking. "I wonder if Emil is colorblind," she said finally. "He said he doesn't know if he sees things the same way we do with his special glasses."

"Let's look up the test pictures," Charlotte said. "We can get him to look at them and find out!"


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

Colorblind test image from https://factsverse.com/10-images-test-color-blind/

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, Our Favorite Verses: Poems from The Doll's Storybook and More Classic Tales Untold: Stories 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 © 2020, 2025 by Peggy Stuart

There's Sunshine in the Rain!

Billy and Charlotte had to walk Freckles and Pierre early, because it was supposed to rain soon. "I wish it wouldn't rain," Bi...