by
Grandma Baadsgaard
Happy
Birthday Sammy.
I
hope you know how much I love yo
Keep
dreaming and building
and
your wishes will come true.
Sam gathered up a pile
of gears, wires and pieces of scrap metal in his garage. Then he found some
batteries. Next he carefully placed all his supplies into a shoe box. He walked
into the kitchen where his mother was making soap on the stove with her safety goggles.
“Do not bother me,” Sam
said to his noisy family. “I am going to make a robot and I need my brain to
focus. So don’t bother me until I come out of my bedroom. Scientists need to
concentrate without distractions.”
Sam’s mother, still
stirring the lye mixture, nodded. She understood. But his younger brothers
Logan and Liam scratched their heads. They did not know about the vital
importance of absolute quiet in a scientist’s laboratory of wonders.
Sam walked into his bedroom
then closed and locked the door. First he tried putting his gears and levers
together one way, then another. Then he tried hooking up the wires and
batteries one way then another.
It wasn’t working.
“AAAHHHHH!” Sam yelled
in frustration. “Why can’t I get this robot to work? What am I doing wrong?”
That is when Sam heard
someone quietly knocking on his bedroom door. When he opened the door he saw
his sister Sophia holding her old doll.
“Yes?” Sam asked. “I
thought I told everybody to leave me alone so I can concentrate.”
“I think that you are
frustrated,” Sophia answered. “Maybe your robot needs a little personality.”
She handed Sam two
popped off buttons for the eyes, a felt smile and two floppy ears from the doll
Sam had destroyed when he was in his rocket scientist stage.
“My robot doesn’t need
these,” Sam said. “My robot is not a doll.”
“I know that,” Sophie
said. “But you never know. Sometimes I think when I go to sleep all my dolls
come alive and play around in my room. Maybe it works the same way with
robots.”
Sammy rolled his eyes,
thanked his sister and closed the door.
“AAHHH!” kept coming
from Sam’s room.
Sam worked hard all
afternoon until it was supper time. Then his mother knocked on the door.
“Sam, come to supper,”
Sam’s mother said through the door. “You’ve been working long enough and you
need a break.”
Sam opened the door and
followed his mother into the kitchen shaking his head. He saw her home-made
soap lined up on the counter.
“It just won’t work,”
Sam said. “I’ve tried everything and it just won’t work.”
“Well, why don’t you
sleep on it and try again tomorrow,” Sam’s mother said.
Sam nodded. Then he ate
supper and went outside to play. When it was time for bed, he put on his
pajamas, brushed his teeth and climbed into bed. He saw his lifeless robot
standing in the corner of his room. He was almost going to put a face on him
from his sister’s doll but he thought twice and decided not to. Then he fell
asleep.
When Sam woke up in the
morning he saw his robot in the corner of the room with two button eyes, a felt
smile and two floppy ears looking back at him. Sam rubbed his eyes and looked
again.
Then he scrunched his
eyebrows and said, “Where did you get that face?”
Then he rubbed his eyes
again and walked over to his sister’s room where he found Sophia playing with
her dolls in her three doll houses.
“Sophia, did you put
your doll face on my robot after I went to sleep?”
“No,” she answered. “I
went to bed before you did remember.”
Sam walked back into
his room and picked up his robot. Then he turned the switch and set the smiling
robot on the floor. The robot walked across the room, bumped into the wall, turned
around and walked back toward him before it stopped.
“Mom!” Sammy yelled,
“My robot works.”
Sam’s mother and father,
his sister and two brothers ran into his room and watched while Sam wound it up
again.
“See, I told you so,”
Sophia said. “Even robots need personality.”
Sammy lowered his
eyebrows and began thinking of way to stay up all night so he could see what
really happens in his bedroom when he falls asleep at night.
“Maybe you’re right,”
Sammy answered.
Sammy’s father and two
brothers scratched their heads. But Sammy’s mother and sister winked at Sammy
because now he knew the secret.
Magic is everywhere, if
you just believe.
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1 comment:
Wonderful story, and Happy Birthday, Sammy. I love your Grandma's story she wrote about you and your robot.
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