WONDERFUL WELCOME
A Tapestry of Faith Program for Children
SESSION 6: THE GIFT OF FRIENDS
BY AISHA HAUSER AND SUSAN LAWRENCE
© Copyright 2008 Unitarian Universalist Association.
Published to the Web on 11/8/2014 9:12:13 PM PST.
This program and additional resources are available on the UUA.org web site at
www.uua.org/religiouseducation/curricula/tapestryfaith.
SESSION OVERVIEW
INTRODUCTION
A friend may well be reckoned the masterpiece of nature.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
Hold a true friend with both your hands.
— Nigerian proverb
People are social animals, and relating to others affirms both our and others' inherent dignity and self-worth. This session introduces the intangible gift of friendship and gives participants ways to show they appreciate their friends. The children learn that having friends and being a friend are an important part of who we are.
GOALS
This session will:
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Participants will:
SESSION-AT-A-GLANCE
ACTIVITY | MINUTES |
Opening | 5 |
Activity 1: Wonder Box | 5 |
Activity 2: Story — How Coyote Lost His Songs, Music, and Dance | 10 |
Activity 3: I Like My Friend Because... | 10 |
Activity 4: Singing "Make New Friends" | 5 |
Activity 5: Tissue Paper Friendship Flowers | 20 |
Faith in Action: Bring a Friend to Sunday School | varies |
Closing | 5 |
Alternate Activity 1: Coyote and Friends Role Play | 15 |
Alternate Activity 2: Making Friendship Bracelets | 15 |
SPIRITUAL PREPARATION
Most of us know what it is like to enjoy and value our friends, and also what it is like to want to be alone. Take a quiet moment to reflect on friendships you have valued, and on times when you wanted — like Coyote — nothing but to be alone. How have you balanced these needs?
Take your own experiences and appreciative energy around friendship into today's session.
SESSION PLAN
OPENING (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Gather participants in a circle around the chalice. You may say:
All around the world, Unitarian Universalists of all ages light chalices when they gather together. With this ritual, Unitarian Universalists can connect to one another, even though they might never meet each other.
Now we will light the chalice, the symbol of our Unitarian Universalist faith; then say together our opening words.
Light the chalice and invite the children to repeat each line of the opening words.
We are Unitarian Universalists.
With minds that think,
Hearts that love,
And hands that are ready to serve.
Together we care for our Earth,
And work for friendship and peace in our world.
Extinguish the chalice.
ACTIVITY 1: THE WONDER BOX (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
While children are still in a circle around the chalice, show them the Wonder Box. Invite them to guess what gift could be in this big, beautifully wrapped box. Take some guesses. Then pass the box around for children to open and find the friendship bracelet inside. Ask the children if any of them have ever had a bracelet like this, or made one for someone. Tell them it is called a "friendship bracelet."
Sometimes people make a bracelet like this to give a friend. When you give or get this kind of bracelet, it's not the whole gift, is it? What do you think the real gift is?
Allow guesses; affirm the answer "friendship."
That's right. Friendship is a gift we can give to people we have known a long time or people we have just met, with or without a bracelet. There are lots of things that make a person a friend. Today we are going to talk about how we appreciate our friends — the friends we already have, and new friends we will meet.
ACTIVITY 2: STORY — HOW COYOTE LOST HIS SONGS, MUSIC, AND DANCE (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Invite the children to get comfortable for listening to a story. If some children will participate in the telling, gather them around you where the whole group can see them. Read or tell the story.
ACTIVITY 3: I LIKE MY FRIEND BECAUSE... (10 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Ask the children if they ever felt like Coyote did, that they were tired of their friends or didn't like something about them, and felt like playing alone. Allow some comments. Then ask, "What happened to Coyote after he left all his friends?" Affirm comments like:
Invite the children one at a time to choose a stuffed animal, a doll or a picture card from the basket or bag, preferably without seeing which one they are taking. You might say, "[Name of child], would you like to have a new friend?" Ask each child, "[Name of child], who is your new friend?" Allow the child to give the friend a name. Then ask, "What is something special that you like about [new friend's name]?" Affirm all responses by saying, "Thank you," or "Pleased to meet you, [new friend's name]." After all children have had a chance, ask them to return the "new friends" to the basket or bag so they can play together.
ACTIVITY 4: SINGING "MAKE NEW FRIENDS" (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Singing this song together affirms being open to new friends and valuing the friends we already have. You may sing it as a round or have the group do a simple circle dance for a more active experience.
Gather children in a circle. Teach the song, line by line:
Make new friends,
And keep the old.
One is silver
And the other's gold.
To sing it as a round, form two groups. The first group starts the song. When they reach the line, "One is silver... ," the second group starts the song. Lead both groups to sing the verse three times.
For a simple circle dance, invite the children to stand in a circle and hold hands. Have them walk clockwise as you start singing the song, and switch directions with each couplet. To end the song and dance, lead everyone to walk to the middle of the circle and raise their arms together on the word "gold."
You may like to also teach this verse:
A circle is round,
It has no end.
That's how long
I want to be your friend.
ACTIVITY 5: TISSUE PAPER FRIENDSHIP FLOWERS (20 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Tell the children they will make a tissue paper flower. According to what you have decided, tell them:
You can keep your flower to remind you to value your friends, old and new, and to remind you that your old and new friends value you.
Or: You can keep your flower. You might like to give it to an old friend or a new friend. When you do, tell them something special you like about them, why you like being their friend.
Or: After we make our flowers, we will each give them to one of our old or new friends here in Wonderful Welcome.
Leave time for assembling the flowers and for clean-up. In keeping with the option you have chosen, invite the children to say what they will do with their flowers when they take them home, or gather the children in a circle and have each child pass their flower to the left. Make sure that every child gives and receives a flower.
How to Make a Flower
Stack five 8x10-inch sheets evenly. Fold the sheets like an accordion. Twist the pipe cleaner around the center of the paper. Gently pull each piece of paper towards the top center of the flower, separating each sheet of paper from the others to form the petals.
CLOSING (5 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Gather the children in a circle. Show them the Wonder Box poster. Explain that it looks like the Wonder Box to remind us about our intangible gifts. Invite a child to tape the friendship bracelet (or image of a Coyote story character) to the Wonder Box poster. You might say:
Just like Coyote, we learned today that it is very important to value our friends. Friends we already know and new friends, too. Our friends can make our day and our lives full of music. Just like Coyote.
Tell the children you are happy and thankful you could all be together today. You may say:
Giving thanks for being together helps us remember that all kinds of friends are important, and we appreciate every one. Let's say our closing words of gratitude together.
Invite the children to hold hands. Show them where you have posted the closing words. Ask them to say each line with you, and say the lines slowly:
We are thankful.
We are thankful to be here.
We are thankful to be here, together.
We are thankful to be here, together, now.
Then ask one child to very gently squeeze the hand of the person to their left, and have that person continue to pass the squeeze until the squeeze has returned to the person who started it. Tell the person who started the squeeze to signal that it has returned to them by raising their arms, still holding hands with the people on either side. When this happens, instruct everyone to raise their clasped hands, together. If you like, suggest a word for them to say at this moment, like "Good-bye!" or "Shalom!" or the name of this session's intangible gift — Friendship!
Extinguish the chalice. Distribute the Taking It Home handouts. Thank and dismiss participants.
FAITH IN ACTION: BRING A FRIEND TO SUNDAY SCHOOL
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
This is an opportunity for the children to share something special with a friend — their faith community. Share with visitors the Opening, Wonder Box, Wonder Box poster, and other group rituals. Let the children know that when they help their visiting friends participate they are showing appreciation of their friendship and giving an intangible gift. Tell the children they are also receiving the gift of friendship, because their friends made time to come be a part of Wonderful Welcome.
LEADER REFLECTION AND PLANNING
Reflect on these questions and discuss them with your co-leaders:
TAKING IT HOME
A friend may well be reckoned the masterpiece of nature.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
Hold a true friend with both your hands.
— Nigerian proverb
IN TODAY'S SESSION...
When the children opened the Wonder Box today, they found a friendship bracelet. We talked about the intangible gift of friendship. Friends can be people we have known a long time or people we just met.
In the story, How Coyote Lost His Songs, Music and Dance, a coyote decides that he doesn't want to be around his friends. As he abandons his friends to go off and be alone, he loses his ability to sing, dance and make music. Through a dream, he learns how his friends enrich his life in such a way that they inspire his music, song and dance. The children made "friendship flowers" to share with someone special. They also sang the song, "Make New Friends."
EXPLORE THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Talk about...
How do you make friends as a family? Have you vacationed and met people whom you have kept in touch with? Even if you don't see friends you meet on vacation again, recall how they made the vacation more fun by sharing experiences. Think about the friends you have made in your life, and talk about why it is important to have friends.
EXTEND THE TOPIC TOGETHER. Try...
... reaching out to an old friend you have not spoken to in a long time. Talk as a family about someone you all remember, perhaps from an old neighborhood, a previous school or job, or another congregation. Contact them and ask how they are doing. You can have your child draw a picture to send to that friend.
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 1: COYOTE AND FRIENDS ROLE PLAY (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Optional: Obtain a white shawl for a prop to suggest the character, White Buffalo Woman, is not an animal but a dream spirit.
Description of Activity
Invite children to use the images of the story characters to make puppets or masks. Distribute the images for puppets or masks and place other materials on work tables for children to share. Most children will be able to cut out the basic shapes for each mask/puppet. Be ready to help children cut the openings marked for weaving ribbons through to make a mask (see diagram on each page).
Leave time for children to play with the puppets or masks. You may wish to guide them to re-enact the story, “How Coyote Lost His Songs, Music, and Dance.”
ALTERNATE ACTIVITY 2: MAKING FRIENDSHIP BRACELETS (15 MINUTES)
Materials for Activity
Preparation for Activity
Description of Activity
Gather the children at work tables and tell them that they will make beaded friendship bracelets that they may give to a friend. Give each child a length of stretchy string. Help them tie a knot at one end and begin stringing beads. Invite them to create any pattern they like. When they are finished, tie the two ends of string together to form a bracelet that can be stretched onto the wrist. Tell the children they can take their friendship bracelets home to give to whomever they like.
WONDERFUL WELCOME: SESSION 6:
STORY: HOW COYOTE LOST HIS SONGS, MUSIC, AND DANCE
From, Our Seven Principles in Story and Verse: A Collection for Children and Adults by Kenneth Collier (Boston: Skinner House Books, 1997). Used with permission.
Read or tell the story.
Here is a new story about Coyote. One day it occurred to him that he didn't need any of the other creatures. There he was, sitting pretty all by himself. What did he need anyone else for? He had his songs, his flute and drum, and his fire. He had his dancing and his huge tipi. Besides, all the other creatures were kind of strange. There was Rabbit, with his huge ears and enormous legs, and all he ever did was run around. And there was Moose, with that absurd head of antlers, wandering up to his knees in marshes. And there were all these pesky birds, flitting around, twittering, and never letting Coyote nap. Ridiculous! Who needed them? Not Coyote!
So he decided to just leave them all behind. He picked himself up and wandered off, trying to find a place where he could be alone. Entirely alone, with none of these silly and absurd creatures to bother him, where he could dance his dances by himself and sing and play his flute and drum for no one but himself, a place where he wouldn't have to share his fire and he could nap in peace.
As Coyote was leaving, Rabbit happened to see him and tagged along. At first he ran ahead with his big legs and then he ran back, and then ahead, and then back. Coyote ignored him, hoping he would just go away.
"Hey, Coyote," Rabbit yelled. "Where ya goin'?"
Coyote ignored him.
Rabbit ran on ahead and came back. "Hey, Coyote," he said. "Know what's on the other side of that hill? I do. I just saw it."
Coyote was curious, but he ignored Rabbit and just kept on walking. Rabbit ran on ahead and came back.
"Hey, Coyote," he said. "There's something over there, where you're headed, and you ought to know about it. I just saw it. Want me to tell you about it?"
Well, Coyote did want to know, but he just ignored Rabbit, hoping he'd go away and leave him alone. Ridiculous Rabbit.
Rabbit's feelings were a bit hurt. "Coyote, you know what? You're crazy." And he went away.
That night, a funny thing happened. Coyote stopped and built his fire and sat down to sing, as he did every night. But as hard as he tried, he couldn't remember any of his songs. And so all he could do was play his flute and drum, and dance a little. But he couldn't sing. And the night was strangely quiet.
The next day, Coyote was off again, feeling a little sad and a little strange. But he still wanted to get away from these ridiculous creatures with their absurd ways of being. Before long, he came to a marsh. It was so wide he didn't see how he could go around it, and, shrugging his shoulders, he started to go through it. Pretty soon he ran into Moose, who was as usual up to his knees in mud and weeds. Moose lifted his huge head of antlers when he saw Coyote coming. "Well, hello Coyote," he said. "What brings you way out here to the marshes?"
Coyote ignored him and kept looking for a way to cross the mud. Moose swung his great head this way and that, a little miffed that Coyote was ignoring him.
"Coyote, if you're looking for a dry path, I could help you," he said.
Coyote looked right at him and said nothing. What a ridiculous creature, Coyote thought to himself. lf I had such silly things growing out of my head, I wouldn't let anyone see them!
Moose's feelings really were hurt by now. "You know what, Coyote? You're crazy!" And Moose walked away.
Coyote finally did find his way across the marsh and went on. That night something strange happened. Again, Coyote built his fire and tried to make his music, but not only had he forgotten his songs, now he couldn't remember how to play his flute and drum. All he could do was dance around the fire. And the night was frighteningly silent.
The next day, Coyote was really upset and a little afraid, but he had decided that he would get away from all these silly creatures, and get away he would. So he set off again. This time, he came to a little stream that flowed down out of the mountains. All along its banks were bushes and flowers and it was beautiful and still and cool. And since he was thirsty and a little tired, Coyote took a long drink, sat down, and decided to take a nap.
As they often are, the bushes were filled with birds, and just as Coyote was about to go to sleep, the little birds started singing their songs. This was exactly what he wanted to get away from. It really made him angry that the birds wouldn't let him sleep in peace. And he was a little afraid and jealous that they could sing and he had forgotten his songs and even how to sing. And so he leaped up and snarled and barked at them to frighten them away.
And he succeeded. They flew up and off. But one bird, a little braver than the others, said to him — being careful to fly just out of his reach — "Coyote, you're crazy!" And off she went.
Coyote was kind of pleased with himself for getting rid of the birds and so he decided to stay right there. That night he made his fire, but the strangest thing happened. Not only could he no longer sing, and not only could he no longer play his flute and drum, but now he couldn't even remember how to dance! All Coyote could do was stare into the silent fire and think about how much he had lost.
Finally he fell asleep and dreamed. In his dream, White Buffalo Woman appeared to him and asked him why he was so sad and scared. Coyote explained how he had lost his songs and music and dance. He didn't know what to do, and he was afraid that he would also lose his fire.
White Buffalo Woman asked him why he was out here all alone. Coyote explained that he was tired of being surrounded all the time by those silly creatures who looked strange and acted strange and lived such ridiculous lives, and he had decided that he would live by himself, away from them all.
"Coyote," said White Buffalo Woman, "don't you understand that your music and your dance, and even your fire, are nothing but the spirits of those creatures who are different from you? As you drove them away, they left even your heart and took their spirits with them. If you want your music and dance back, you must go back to your friends and accept them back into your heart. Only then will you be able to go on."
The next morning when Coyote awoke, he couldn't remember his dream, but when the birds began to sing, as they always do in the morning, he sat still and listened to them. And then he began to go back the way he had come. That night when he built his fire, he could remember his dance. And the next day he went on, back the way he had come, and chanced upon Moose. And he asked Moose how to get across the marsh.
That night, when he built his fire, he remembered how to play his flute and drum and the night was not so lonely. And the next day he still went back the way he had come, and suddenly up ran Rabbit. Coyote ran with Rabbit and played and had a good old time. And that night, when he had built his fire, the air was filled with Coyote's songs. And never again did Coyote forget how easily he could lose his music and his dance and even his fire.
WONDERFUL WELCOME: SESSION 6:
LEADER RESOURCE 1: COYOTE, RABBIT, MOOSE, BIRD AND WHITE BUFFALO WOMAN MASKS AND PUPPETS
WONDERFUL WELCOME: SESSION 6:
LEADER RESOURCE 1 PAGE 2
FIND OUT MORE
Coyote
In Native American oral storytelling traditions, Coyote is a character that appears as a male trickster and sometimes a buffoon. In a typical story about Coyote, he gets himself into trouble and, as he gets himself out, the listener learns some new wisdom along with Coyote. In Kenneth Collier’s book, Our Seven Principles in Story and Verse: A Collection for Children and Adults (Boston: Skinner House, 1997), Coyote is the protagonist of a tale that illustrates why it is important to appreciate our friends.