Waiting Is the Hardest Part
It's Mazie's turn on the new tire swing. This is going to be the longest wait in history.
Persephone discovers the Popcorn Jobs — three things to do while waiting that turn the hardest minute into something she can actually handle.
What's inside
Waiting is one of the hardest things for a fast brain. When Mazie climbs on the brand-new tire swing first, one minute stretches into a hundred hours — and Persephone has to decide what to do with all that squeezy, jumpy energy.
No one tells her to "calm down and wait." She finds her own way through: the Popcorn Jobs — movement, a role to play during the wait, and an out-loud countdown that makes invisible time something you can hear. The strategy is hers, and it mostly works, which is the honest part.
"Has it been a hundred hours? It has been one minute."
For grown-ups
Use it before the moment, not during. Read it on a calm afternoon so the popcorn idea is already there the next time a wait gets hard — then follow your kid's lead. It's a rehearsal, not a rulebook. (And it's a story, not medical advice.)
Why families pick it up
The popcorn metaphor
A shared family word for the jumpy feeling of waiting — one your kid can name out loud.
The slip & the repair
Persephone actually loses it, and fixes it. The do-over is modeled, not skipped.
Her idea, her win
No adult hands her the answer. She ends the book competent and liked — especially by herself.
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Read along before you read the book
Get the free "Meet Persephone & Brinley" printable — the character page from the back of every book, perfect for reading aloud first.