Deduwka & CustomNick
CustomNick CustomNick
Hey Deduwka, I’ve been digging into how ancient tales often hide clever problem‑solving tricks. Do you have a story about someone turning a simple tool into a solution for a big challenge?
Deduwka Deduwka
In a quiet valley where the river ran swift, the villagers always worried about the flood season. Every spring the waters rose, and the bridge that led to the market was swept away. One young boy, Tomas, watched his friends and family get stuck on the far side, and he thought, “If only I could help.” Tomas had a small wooden spoon he’d inherited from his grandmother. It was ordinary, no special shape, just a spoon that could stir tea. While walking home one afternoon he noticed that the spoon’s bowl was wider than the usual. He began to imagine it as a sort of tiny boat. He tied a few strong twine strands around it, turning it into a simple raft. The next day, with a few neighbors’ help, he launched the spoon-raft onto the swollen river. The spoon floated, the rope kept it stable, and it carried a sack of grain across the current. The villagers cheered, amazed that a spoon could do the job of a boat. Tomas didn’t stop there. He gathered more spoons, linked them with twine, and created a small raft that could carry people. When the flood finally hit, the community used those spoon rafts to get everyone safely across the river. The lesson that day was clear: the most useful tools aren’t always the grandest; sometimes the simplest objects, when seen with a curious mind, can solve the biggest problems.