A series of engaging
children’s books Aimed at
teaching the core principles
of responsibility and empathy
Series B - Volumes 1 Thru 4
Whose Rock, Whose Wagon ™ ©
The Early Steps
Age Range: 4-7 years
Focus: Basic Responsibility & Cause and Effect
Description: This introductory book helps young children visualize the impact of their actions through the metaphor of rocks and wagons. It teaches fundamental life lessons, such as sharing, picking up toys, and helping others. By understanding how small actions can either add or remove rocks from their own or others’ wagons, children begin to learn the basics of responsibility in an engaging, age-appropriate way.
Series C - Volumes 1 Thru 4
Whose Rock, Whose Wagon ™©
Building Responsibility
Age Range: 8 - 10 years
Focus: Empathy & Accountability
Description: As children grow, so does their understanding of how their actions impact others. This book introduces the idea of empathy—showing how our choices can either help or burden those around us. With real-life examples like school responsibilities and helping family members, children learn to recognize how their actions affect their friends, family, and community, developing a deeper sense of accountability.
Series D - Volumes 1 Thru 4
Whose Rock, Whose Wagon ™©
Overcoming Obstacles
Emotional Intelligence
Age Range: 11 - 13 years
Focus: Empathy & Accountability
Description: At this stage, children are introduced to the idea that personal struggles—like stress, school pressures, or friendships—are rocks that can make their wagon feel heavier. Through this book, readers learn how to manage their struggles by making mindful choices and maintaining momentum. It helps them build resilience, teaching them that while challenges may slow them down, they can always regain their momentum by staying focused and pushing forward.
Series E - Volumes 1 Thru 4
Whose Rock, Whose Wagon ™©
Self-Awareness
Lifelong Responsibility
Age Range: 14 + years
Focus: Mastering Responsibility
Description: In this final book of the initial series, young adults are challenged to take full ownership of their actions and responsibilities. Whether it’s decisions about school, work, or personal relationships, this book helps them understand the long-term consequences of their choices. It also touches on managing more complex "rocks" like overconsumption, stress, and emotional challenges, offering practical advice on how to keep their wagon moving forward and build a balanced, thoughtful life.
Understanding The Rocks and Wagons Metaphor
Does everyone have an invisible wagon in real life ?
Yes. Everyone has an invisible wagon in life that they carry with them wherever they go. You can’t see it, but you can feel it. It holds your feelings, responsibilities, worries, and challenges. The rocks in your wagon come from the choices you make in life.
What is a wagon?
A wagon has wheels and is made to carry things, like toys, groceries, or supplies. But in our world, your wagon is not real. It is something you feel, an invisible wagon that helps you understand life.
Is there a wagon behind me now?
Yes. Just like you might carry a backpack or a lunchbox, everyone has a wagon behind them. It carries the things we need to do, the things we think about, and the things we feel.
Is my wagon heavy or light?
A wagon can feel heavy or light, just like a real one. When life feels fun, helpful, or happy, your wagon feels lighter. When you have worries, chores, problems, or hard feelings, your wagon feels heavier.
So what is in my wagon?
That depends on your day and your life. Your wagon can hold schoolwork, chores, feelings, worries, goals, responsibilities, and even the things that make you happy. Everything you carry in your mind and heart can be part of your wagon.
Can anyone see my wagon?
Not with their eyes. But people who care about you can often feel when your wagon is heavy. And when you care about others, you can feel their wagons too. That’s kindness, empathy, and understanding.
What can I do about my wagon?
You can do a lot to help keep your wagon lighter:
• Ask for help when you need it
• Do things that make you happy
• Be kind to others
• Take care of yourself
• Help with the things you are able to do
Remember, your wagon is your own special wagon. The choices you make can make it lighter or heavier. Those choices are often the rocks you carry each day.
Your Wagon Is Life
Sometimes you feel happy. Sometimes you feel sad. Sometimes you feel excited, frustrated, proud, worried, or tired. That is because every person has an invisible wagon filled with invisible rocks.
Rocks are the things in life that carry weight. They can be feelings, problems, chores, responsibilities, or challenges you are working through. Some rocks feel small. Some feel very big. The bigger the feeling or problem, the heavier the rock can seem.
But the good news is this: rocks can change. They can get smaller. They can be shared. And sometimes, they can disappear.
Your Wagon, Your Rocks
Imagine you are playing in your room and you drop your shirt on the floor instead of putting it away. That may make things easier for you in that moment, but it can add work for someone else. In a way, you may move a rock from your wagon into your Mom’s or Dad’s wagon. Now their wagon is a little heavier because they have one more thing to do.
That can happen in life. Sometimes we make things easier for ourselves, but a little harder for someone else.
Removing Rocks
The good news is that we can also remove rocks.
When you help someone, you may carry a small rock for a little while, but you make their rock smaller. If you clean your room, help with dishes, finish homework, or do your part, the rocks can shrink or disappear altogether.
Helping does not just make life easier for others. It can make your own wagon lighter too. Doing the right thing often helps everyone. And sometimes, when you do something you love, a rock can disappear simply because your heart feels lighter.
What’s In Your Wagon?
Some rocks are heavy rocks, and some become happy rocks.
A happy rock might start as something hard, like learning to skate, trying a new sport, reading a tough book, or practicing something new. At first, it may feel big and heavy. But as you keep going, it becomes easier. Over time, that rock gets smaller, and it can even become something you are proud to carry because it helps make you stronger. That is why not every rock is bad. Some rocks help us grow.
So every day, ask yourself ... What is in my wagon today?
What can I do to make it lighter?
Who might need help with theirs?
And always remember, you don’t have to pull your wagon alone.
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