I've had a kids story kicking around in my head about a falcon, penguin, and peacock. They're best friends and are the best at flying, swimming, and being pretty respectively. Then a Huffy Puffin comes to their island and convinces each of them they're making their friends feel bad by being exceptional. So they stop doing what they love to "help" their friends, and the puffin steps in as the new best bird, even though she's just average in each category.
For a children's story, you need a simpler narrative. You've got an upward and a downward story flow, when it should only be a downward flow for stories for youth under 4. You should begin with the four birds together, and the Puffin challenging the others to contests they aren't good at, but it is average, because it wouldn't be "fair" to compete in something they're obviously the best at. Then it lords it over them and laughs at them. They talk it out and realize the Puffin is purposefully keeping them from showing off their real talents, and compete in their dominant trait. Puffin flees the scene as all the birds in the flock praise the trio for being good at one thing.
Finish with pithy statement about how everyone is good at something, and shouldn't feel bad about what they worked hard to be good at.
An alternative ending would be that somehow a disaster happens to Huffy Puffin, and the trio need to use their strengths to solve the problem, and Puffin realizes its errors in trying to stop people from excelling.
Then, while Huffy Puffin is demanding they all compensate her for her emotional labor, Xi Jinpooh Bear captures them all then sells their butchered carcasses at a wet market near a virus lab.
It's time for alt-baby books. I want a whole series of Curious George-style "Lil Pepes"
Curious George Discovers Nonuniform Distribution of Neurological Traits Between Races
Curious George discovers FBI Crime Statistics
I've had a kids story kicking around in my head about a falcon, penguin, and peacock. They're best friends and are the best at flying, swimming, and being pretty respectively. Then a Huffy Puffin comes to their island and convinces each of them they're making their friends feel bad by being exceptional. So they stop doing what they love to "help" their friends, and the puffin steps in as the new best bird, even though she's just average in each category.
Write it. Sounds like a good story, pretty easy to illustrate too.
I love this.
For a children's story, you need a simpler narrative. You've got an upward and a downward story flow, when it should only be a downward flow for stories for youth under 4. You should begin with the four birds together, and the Puffin challenging the others to contests they aren't good at, but it is average, because it wouldn't be "fair" to compete in something they're obviously the best at. Then it lords it over them and laughs at them. They talk it out and realize the Puffin is purposefully keeping them from showing off their real talents, and compete in their dominant trait. Puffin flees the scene as all the birds in the flock praise the trio for being good at one thing.
Finish with pithy statement about how everyone is good at something, and shouldn't feel bad about what they worked hard to be good at.
An alternative ending would be that somehow a disaster happens to Huffy Puffin, and the trio need to use their strengths to solve the problem, and Puffin realizes its errors in trying to stop people from excelling.
Then, while Huffy Puffin is demanding they all compensate her for her emotional labor, Xi Jinpooh Bear captures them all then sells their butchered carcasses at a wet market near a virus lab.