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The Wemmicks were small wooden people. Each of the wooden people was carved by a
woodworker named Eli. His workshop sat on a hill overlooking their village.
Every Wemmick was 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 village.
And all day, 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 gray dot stickers. Up and down the
streets all over the city, people could be seen sticking stars or dots on one
another.
The pretty ones, those
with smooth wood and fine paint, always got stars. But if the wood was rough or
the paint chipped, the Wemmicks gave 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 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. Others, though, could do little. They
got dots.
Punchinello was one of
these. He tried to jump high like the others, but he always fell. And when he
fell, the others would gather around and give him dots. Sometimes when he fell,
it would scar his wood, so the people would give him more dots. He would try to
explain why he fell and say something silly, and the Wemmicks would give him
more dots.
After a while he 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
another dot. In fact, he had so many gray dots that some people would come up
and give him one without reason.
"He deserves lots of
dots," the wooden people would agree with one another.
"He's not a good
wooden person."
After a while Punchinello
believed them. "I'm not a good wemmick," he would say. The few times
he went outside, he hung around other Wemmicks who had a lot of dots. He felt
better around them.
One day he met a Wemmick
who was unlike any he'd ever met. She had no dots or stars. She was just wooden.
Her name was Lulia.
It wasn't that people
didn't try to give her stickers; it's just that the stickers didn't stick. Some
admired Lulia 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 it wouldn't stay 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,"
Lulia replied. "every day I go see Eli."
"Eli?"
"Yes, Eli. The
woodcarver. I sit in the workshop with him."
"Why?"
"Why don't you find
out for yourself? Go up the hill. He's there. "
And with that the Wemmick
with no marks turned and skipped away.
"But he won't want to
see me!" Punchinello cried out.
Lulia didn't hear. So
Punchinello went home. He sat near a window and watched the wooden people as
they scurried around giving each other stars and dots.
"It's not
right," he muttered to himself. And he resolved to go see Eli.
He walked up the narrow
path to the top of the hill and stepped into the big shop. His wooden eyes
widened at the size of everything. The stool was as tall as he was. He had to
stretch on his tiptoes to see the top of the workbench. A hammer was as long as
his arm. Punchinello swallowed hard.
"I'm not staying
here!" and he turned to leave. Then he heard his name.
"Punchinello?"
The voice was deep and strong.
Punchinello stopped.
"Punchinello! How
good to see you. Come and let me have a look at you."
Punchinello turned slowly
and looked at the large bearded craftsman.
"You know my
name?" the little Wemmick asked.
"Of course I do. I
made you."
Eli stooped down and
picked him up and set him on the bench. "Hmm, " he spoke thoughtfully
as he inspected the gray circles. "Looks like you've been given some bad
marks."
"I didn't mean to,
Eli. I really tried hard."
"Oh, you don't have
to defend yourself to me. I don't care what the other Wemmicks think."
"You don't?"
"No, and you
shouldn't either. Who are they to give stars or dots? They're Wemmicks just like
you. What they think doesn't matter, Punchinello. All that matters is what I
think. And I think you are pretty special."
Punchinello laughed.
"Me, special? Why? I can't walk fast. I can't jump. My paint is peeling.
Why do I matter to you?"
Eli looked at Punchinello,
put his hands on those small wooden shoulders, and spoke very slowly.
"Because you're mine. That's why you matter to me."
Punchinello had never had
anyone look at him like this--much less his maker. He didn't know what to say.
"Every day I've been
hoping you'd come," Eli explained.
"I came because I met
someone who had no marks."
"I know. She told me
about you."
"Why don't the
stickers stay on her?"
"Because she has
decided that what I think is more important than what they think. The stickers
only stick if you let them."
"What?"
"The stickers only
stick if they matter to you. The more you trust my love, the less you care about
the stickers."
"I'm not sure I
understand."
"You will, but it
will take time. You've got a lot of marks. For now, just come to see me every
day and let me remind you how much I care."
Eli lifted Punchinello off
the bench and set him on the ground.
"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 when he did, a dot
fell to the ground. |