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Kenneth Sanchez

The Parable of the Stickered Wemmicks by Max Lucado

The Wemmicks were small wooden people carved by a wood maker named Eli.  His workshop sat on a hill overlooking their village.

 

Every Wemmick is different.  But all day, every day, the Wemmicks did the same thing: they gave each other stickers.

 

Each Wemmick had a box each of golden star stickers and gray dot stickers.  Up and down the streets, people could be seen with sticking stars or dots on one another.  The pretty ones, those with smooth wood and fine paint, always got stars.  The talented ones got stars, too.  Some knew big words or could sing very pretty songs.  Everyone gave them stars.  But if the wood is rough or the paint chipped, the Wemmicks gave dots.  Others could do little.  They got dots.

 

Punchinello was one of these.  He tried to jump high but always fell.  The others would gather 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 say something dumb, and then people would give him another dot.

 

"He deserves lots of dots," the wooden people would agree with one another.  "He is 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 with Wemmicks who had lots of dots.  He felt better around them.  

 

One day, he met Lulia, a Wemmick who was unlike any he'd ever met -- she had no dots nor stars. 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 stick either.

 

That's the way I want to be, Punchinello thought.  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 to see Eli."

 

"Why?"

 

"Why don't you find out for yourself?  Go up the hill.  He's there."

 

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.  He resolved to go see Eli.

 

"Punchinello?" the voice was deep and strong.  "Punchinello!  How good to see you!"  Eli stooped down and picked him up and set him on the bench.

 

Punchinello looked at the large bearded craftsman.  "You know my name?" the little Wemmick asked.

 

"Of course I do.  I made you."  Eli inspected the gray circles.  "Looks like you have been given some bad marks."

 

"I didn't mean to.  I really tried hard."

 

"Oh, you don't have to defend yourself to me, child.  I don't care what the other Wemmicks think."

 

"You don't?"

 

"No, you shouldn't either.  Who are they to give stars and dots.  They're Wemmicks just like you.  What they think doesn't matter.  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 had been hoping you'd come," Eli explained.

 

"I came because I met someone with no marks."

 

"I know.  she told me about you."

 

"Why don't the stickers stick on her?"

 

"Because she has decided that what I think is more important than what they think.  The stickers only stick when you let them."

 

"What?"

 

"The stickers only stick when 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, in his heart, thought, I think he really means it.  And when he did, a dot fell to the ground.  ^_^





Source: Health & Home

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