Pom-Pom, a pink piglet, and Yarena, a gray kitten in a coral top, push a red truck together in a sunny sandbox.
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A Truck for Two

Playing together, little by little

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Illustration from A Truck for Two — 1
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Guide for families

🎯 Educator Guide: “A Truck for Two”

💭 What is this story about?

Pom-Pom is in the sandbox with his red truck, going vroom-vroom as he loads and dumps sand again and again. His is a whole, calm, happy kind of play. Then Yarena arrives, with her green eyes, and puts her hand on the truck. Pom-Pom holds it tight: “Mine!” Mommy Pig appears for a moment, sets something yellow down in the sand, and steps away. From there, the two little ones are in the same sandbox, each busy with their own thing, watching each other sideways — until something unexpected gets them both pushing the truck together.

🧠 What will children discover?

  • That wanting a toy very much isn't bad: Pom-Pom's “Mine!” is a normal response around age two, not a flaw
  • That playing near someone is already a kind of company: you don't have to do the exact same thing to be together
  • That the body sometimes knows before the mind does: there are moments when you do something good without fully deciding to
  • That when there's room for everyone, unexpected things can happen: having your own bucket changes the whole situation
  • That cooperating doesn't always mean giving up your toy: you can reach out to someone else with what you have

🤝 How can we keep this conversation going?

  • “Is there a toy or something you don't like other people touching? Why that one?”
  • “Have you ever played next to someone without doing exactly the same thing? What was that like?”
  • “Pom-Pom didn't think it through — the truck just went toward the bucket. Are there things you do without thinking first?”
  • “What do you think Yarena felt when Pom-Pom helped her fill the bucket?”

🎯 Educational approach

Around age two or three, children aren't “being selfish” when they shout “Mine!” — they're expressing that their things feel like part of themselves. This story doesn't ask them to get past that or to share before they're ready. Instead, it shows something they can already do on their own: stay close to the other child, observe, and discover that there are ways of reaching out that no one has taught them. Pom-Pom's final gesture isn't the result of a rule he learned — it's something that comes from inside him, without him fully understanding it himself. That's the kind of connection educators can nurture by giving space — without pushing, without resolving, without explaining too soon.

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