Frog and Toad: The Philosophy of Simple Living

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 31 тра 2024
  • In this video, I chat about the 1970s children’s book series Frog and Toad-written and illustrated by Arnold Lobel-including its helpful/wholesome themes and why it’s so cozy and memorable.
    Support the channel, if you like ✨: / qualityculture
    AIDS memorial quilt: www.aidsmemorial.org/interact...
    Sources mentioned:
    Arnold Lobel's Frog and Toad Together as a Primer for Critical Literacy
    www.researchgate.net/publicat...
    Project MUSE - An Interview with Arnold Lobel
    muse.jhu.edu/article/243724
    The Frog and Toad stories of Arnold Lobel: a psychoanalytic perspective
    www.researchgate.net/publicat...
    “Frog and Toad”: An Amphibious Celebration of Same-Sex Love | The New Yorker
    www.newyorker.com/books/page-...
    0:00 Intro
    1:19 Arnold Lobel
    6:39 Simple Living
    11:32 Storytime with Stef
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,8 тис.

  • @roux823
    @roux823 Рік тому +5926

    I really appreciate when stories like this are taken seriously and not dismissed as simple nonsense for children. They are worthwhile for all readers. Stories are more than true, not because they tell us that dragons exist but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten

    • @VictoriaMeira7
      @VictoriaMeira7 Рік тому +25

      yowww maybe credit neil gaiman if you're gonna quote him

    • @rachaelknudsen8801
      @rachaelknudsen8801 Рік тому +73

      @@VictoriaMeira7 The quote actually came from G.K. Chesterton.

    • @STRcircaFKR
      @STRcircaFKR Рік тому +32

      @@VictoriaMeira7 woooowww maybe just let people know without drowning them in vinegar

    • @Frac.Razoer
      @Frac.Razoer Рік тому +2

      But dragons aren’t real

    • @rachaelknudsen8801
      @rachaelknudsen8801 Рік тому +13

      @@Frac.Razoer To paraphrase Emma Swan, "Pretty sure I've dated a few." Dragons might steal your time or the brightness in your eyes and they might have words that scorch like fire. Not everything is as it seems.

  • @thesisypheanjournal1271
    @thesisypheanjournal1271 Рік тому +1330

    "They ate wet sandwiches without any tea" is a beautiful line. It underscores that the important thing wasn't the meal; it was that they were sharing it.

    • @eraserewrite
      @eraserewrite Рік тому +12

      Wish I could read the way you do. :’) I would’ve skipped over this without much thought.

    • @violentcroissant
      @violentcroissant Рік тому +25

      Not only that, I think the idea of consuming wet sandwiches always had been unpleasant, but there's a reason why they don't mind having it. As if they're basically saying that "Hey it doesn't matter the sandwich is wet now, you made it and we're going to appreciate it anyway." It's the act of acceptance towards the love by someone is possibly ruined/flawed (symbolised by the the Toad fell into the waters), and them loving the person anyway.

    • @eraserewrite
      @eraserewrite 11 місяців тому +2

      @@violentcroissant I love that. ;_;

    • @user-bg7hs8br9d
      @user-bg7hs8br9d 10 місяців тому

      @@violentcroissant k

    • @user-bg7hs8br9d
      @user-bg7hs8br9d 10 місяців тому

      k

  • @TrollMcLolTheFirst
    @TrollMcLolTheFirst Рік тому +2876

    My mom read to me a frog and toad book and she would add her own spin on it by adding swear words like “these are some good motherfuckin cookies, Toad.” It was so funny to me as a kid.

  • @phillipmargrave
    @phillipmargrave Рік тому +686

    I felt so bad for Toad in his bathing suit when all the animals laughed at him after they all promised not to. It was like feeling insecure and being betrayed/insulted by people that claimed to care about you 😢

  • @fergin4979
    @fergin4979 Рік тому +2882

    I like how the “Alone” story ends with “they were two close friends sitting alone together”
    Theres something deep there, and to me its how natural and healthy i think it is for friends to just enjoy eachothers presence, without feeling the need to always be actively engaging with eachother. You just cycle through moments of conversation and then moments of being alone with your thoughts, but with friends.

    • @doefarris2189
      @doefarris2189 Рік тому +57

      My man Arnold said, "let the gays parallel play" and I felt that

    • @estella.d
      @estella.d Рік тому +40

      I think lobel does an amazing job showing comfortable silence. everyone is able to interact, but not everyone is comfortable with each other to not feel the need to interact. it takes work, patience, and trust to get there, all of which frog and toad have for each other. lobel is incredible

    • @macclift9956
      @macclift9956 Рік тому +1

      The Noddy and Big Ears books were cleaned up because of the whiff of homosexuality.

    • @doefarris2189
      @doefarris2189 Рік тому +5

      @@macclift9956 I thought it was because of all the blackface

    • @elder-woodsilverstein7716
      @elder-woodsilverstein7716 Рік тому +15

      To quote Winnie the Pooh, "Christopher Robin is my best friend to do nothing with."

  • @wompwomp9946
    @wompwomp9946 Рік тому +2411

    I know the whole "touch grass" thing has sorta lost meaning with overuse, but I can't put into words how important it is to just connect with nature and get out of your own head...and get away from the echo chambers, get in touch with yourself, feel small, etc.

    • @TJ-bu9zk
      @TJ-bu9zk Рік тому +51

      I think what cheapens it is advertising touching grass on social media. If you don't post about it, was any grass actually touched?

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU Рік тому +24

      @@TJ-bu9zk It's like the tree falling down in the woods. Who cares?

    • @Pomagranite167
      @Pomagranite167 Рік тому +77

      They do say that "touching some grass and being nature" has been shown in some studies to minimize depression. Not very much study on it but I 100% buy it. Of course ppl feel less depressed when your responsibilities have been limited to "dont get sick. Stay warm. Eat. Sleep. Have fun. Spy on a bird. Don't die." Instead of "don't die. Pay bill as soon as you wake up! 5 cups of coffee. Work. Try not to murder yoir boss. Groceries. Try getting through traffic without dying. Pick up kids. Avoid sister's phone calls. 3 piles of laundry. Stress over finances and job. Does my family love me? Make dinner. Shower. Clean room and kitchen." Modern life imo is causing unhealthy mental habits bc we are just living unnaturally for our species and planet. Of course we are all sick. I've found so much liberation in breaking from modern expectations and just living simply and slowly and appreciating the people I have while i have them and actually GOING to visit my loved ones instead of just calling them. Also reminds them they are loved enough for me to black outan entire period on my calendar just for them instead of just sending a "thinking of u" text ot call them while I'm distracted with dishes.

    • @HieronymousLex
      @HieronymousLex Рік тому

      Fucking please retire touch grass already. It’s been a saying for like decades yet all of you just started overusing the hell out of it because you’re drone NPCs and you just copy what you see

    • @Linkolite
      @Linkolite Рік тому +6

      So vitally important. Nature has very much saved my life.

  • @Chascoso
    @Chascoso Рік тому +1044

    The whole cottage core aesthetic is really a longing for a life where there isn’t so much chaos. I really miss living in the countryside, but I also remember a lot of bad memories during that period. But being surrounded by nature felt like I always had somewhere to go if I needed some space. In the city it’s not as easy.

    • @Saffron-sugar
      @Saffron-sugar Рік тому +47

      I agree, and I don’t think it’s ignoring the fact that people, especially in developing countries, do not live that type of existence or disrespecting them. Guilt doesn’t help them though. Only action will. Ignoring your own mental health will not.
      It’s about escape
      It’s about the idealized thatched roof rose, covered English country cottage that few people are fortunate to have but it is a dream for many

    • @jadefade8663
      @jadefade8663 Рік тому +11

      Exactly, even in the suburbs you feel especially boxed in. I've got to experience the city, the country and the suburbs and if I had to choose I'd probably pick living out in the country but it's easier said than done.

    • @squarebear619
      @squarebear619 Рік тому +15

      It is definitely viewed with rose colored nostalgic glasses rather than the true reality. Small towns are often worse than big city living as it can be more insidious. I think most long for a nonexistent utopia though. It's like how people view the 50s and 60s as some great time period when they were anything but.

  • @Blessed_and_Fit_Over_50
    @Blessed_and_Fit_Over_50 Рік тому +55

    Growing up very poor, I never purchased any books from the scholastic book form that was handed out. A friend gave me “Frog and Toad” bc he knew I really wanted it but never had any money. I carried this book around like it was gold. This book inspired me to draw. I love the earthy colors Thanks for sharing.

  • @elizabethmartin6707
    @elizabethmartin6707 Рік тому +1449

    Funny story, when I was in kindergarten we used to read their books and I was a huge fan. Well, we had a field trip to go to the local playhouse to see a Frog and Toad play. Naturally, I was super excited that I was going to see the real Frog and Toad. When the play started, two adult men walked out on stage claiming to be the titular characters. 6 year old me was so disappointed that it wasn’t an actual frog and toad that I was in a sour mood for the rest of the play. They did hand out animal crackers at the end, so it did make me feel a little better, but I never forgot that feeling of betrayal at being denied the "real" Frog and Toad.

    • @QualityCulture
      @QualityCulture  Рік тому +253

      This made me laugh, especially because I read about the play while researching and when I saw the photos I thought “ngl, I’d be disappointed if I saw this as a kid” 😂

    • @journey7701
      @journey7701 Рік тому +65

      I saw the play on a 2nd grade school trip! I was also weirded out by the 2 adult men playing frog and toad but I remember their song about the cookies slapped

    • @emilyrln
      @emilyrln Рік тому +34

      They spent the costume budget on cookies 😂

    • @pezjunkie13
      @pezjunkie13 Рік тому +44

      That is the same reaction that JRR Tolkien allegedly had to seeing a production of Macbeth for the first time. He was so excited when “the woods” were to supposed to move against Macbeth, but it turned out just be the enemy army in disguise with branches etc. it is allegedly the reason he wrote the Ents rising against Isengard, because he wanted to see it for real. At least according the Lord of the Rings special features DVDs 😅

    • @Wawagirl17
      @Wawagirl17 Рік тому +17

      Oh my god, OP, that is SO stinkin' adorable. Being told you were gonna meet your actual celebrity icons live and in-person, only to have that dream ripped away. Tragic.

  • @bleepbloop8081
    @bleepbloop8081 Рік тому +11482

    Frog and Toad hopped so that CottageCore lesbians could run

    • @saltyfries680
      @saltyfries680 Рік тому +539

      Ok but ain’t NOBODY doing it like the lads Frog and Toad

    • @amandasunshine2
      @amandasunshine2 Рік тому +263

      This is it. The best sentence.

    • @mayln163
      @mayln163 Рік тому +33

      🤣

    • @Emmatriaaa
      @Emmatriaaa Рік тому +61

      Beautifully said.

    • @dandywaysofliving
      @dandywaysofliving Рік тому +21

      I have a short that I consider cottage cored. And old frog living

  • @cd4953
    @cd4953 Рік тому +309

    This video is the adult equivalent to sitting on the carpet for storytime in kindergarten. Thank you for making this; it was strangely therapeutic. You posed interesting ideas and had me thinking the entire time.

  • @TroubledTrooper
    @TroubledTrooper Рік тому +2084

    I think they can be anything to anyone, a gay relationship, an asexual relationship, a reminder of your brother who you spend time with and miss, a friend you loved. It's what makes these books great.

    • @nimapocalyse9569
      @nimapocalyse9569 Рік тому +241

      Yeah. This is the problem today. No one can appreciate the idea of UNIVERSAL appeal, that you can IDENTIFY with people that don't explicitly represent you. It's undoubtedly true that Lobel's viewpoint as a closeted gay man influenced his perspective as an author, but he didn't make these stories about "same sex love" or a commentary on LGBT issues and that's WHY they have such wide appeal and are beloved by so many. And it's exactly that reason why there's such a lack of these kinds of timeless stories today because modern writers feel like they MUST pigeonhole their characters and stories to be representative specific "identities" and "communities" rather than inherently human ideals, struggles, and values.

    • @CrystalRose1111
      @CrystalRose1111 Рік тому +157

      @@nimapocalyse9569 Well both are important, some people have a severe lack of representation and want to see their experiences in media. I don’t think that’s necessarily a bad thing.

    • @nimapocalyse9569
      @nimapocalyse9569 Рік тому +62

      @@CrystalRose1111 you're absolutely correct, and there isn't anything inherently wrong with it. In fact, a specific viewpoint informed by one's unique identity or experience is often the thing that motivates someone to create art or a story to begin with. Where it becomes an issue in my opinion, and what we are seeing in excess today, is when the IDENTITY ITSELF becomes the entire focus of the story, even to the point where there is a fundamental LACK of universal appeal and at the expense of unifying endeavor. In fact, there are numerous identity based stories that writers and actors have outright said "are not for you" if you don't hold the featured identity, and then turn around and cry bigotry when audiences refuse to watch. I see it as a sad devolution of what I consider to be the fundamental art form of human nature.

    • @CrystalRose1111
      @CrystalRose1111 Рік тому +76

      @@nimapocalyse9569 I mean it’s definitely a grey area because a lot of shows that try to promote inclusivity are poorly written. I’m all about inclusive shows are actually well written and entertaining to watch. The first one that comes to mind is She-Ra and the princess of power. A poor example would be that fuckin Velma series that’s coming out lol

    • @oz1747
      @oz1747 Рік тому +27

      @@nimapocalyse9569 Yeah if your entire being is based on your skin tone , political ideology or who you sleep with, that's the problem. The idea that you can't identity with or learn something from someone who looks or thinks different than you is a serious issue... Do we need only black teachers for black students, gay teachers for gay students, Asian teachers..etc..Not to mention judges for courts....that's where this logic takes us...insane!

  • @hallorette5059
    @hallorette5059 Рік тому +1505

    This is one of the best children’s book series. Frog And Toad Are Friends changed my life as a kid. I was super insecure as a kid because I felt like Toad; awkward, silly, selfish and lazy, while I saw my brother as Frog; selfless, competent, patient and kind. It mad me sad because I saw our relationship as one-sided. I read that book and cried because I realized that it was ok, and that’s what friends do: the frogs of the world uplift the toads of the world by kindness and a good example. I began to realize that someday I would have to be Frog to someone else, and I would also be Toad again too. Now I know that it all evens out. We are all both Frog and Toad, to different people in our lives at different times. Frog Are Toad Friends is probably my favorite book of all time.

    • @MissJemimaPuddleduck
      @MissJemimaPuddleduck Рік тому +16

      Beautiful comment!

    • @Thewritingelf
      @Thewritingelf Рік тому +17

      This was deep and insightful AF.

    • @HMSDisaster
      @HMSDisaster Рік тому +15

      Wow, this comment made me cry! I also feel more like Toad, and I’ve never thought of things the way you put them. Thank you. 💕

    • @alpyhaWQFwef
      @alpyhaWQFwef Рік тому +11

      I heard more in your comment than the video. When the subject presented is filtered through an agenda the meaning seems..lessened. Thanks for sharing your beautiful and compassionate interpretation. May we all be Frog and also Toad in our times, and know that's alright.

    • @bluelilacfawn
      @bluelilacfawn Рік тому +4

      i like this a lot :)

  • @UltravioletNomad
    @UltravioletNomad Рік тому +452

    The description of Frog and Toad being children with an adult's freedom better puts in to perspective what exactly is going on with Spongebob, having a job and a house, but going to boating school and playing with simpler pleasures like bubbles and 'bug catching'.

  • @catdragon2584
    @catdragon2584 Рік тому +155

    I had a different interpretation of The Dream, but yours is great and it makes a lot of sense in the context of the series.
    My interpretation is that Toad is envisioning himself as the greatest in the world, and continually builds himself and his ego up by asking Frog if he could do whatever stunt Toad is doing. But he doesn’t know that he’s making Frog feel bad about himself (symbolized by Frog growing smaller every time he says no) until he’s disappeared. And Toad realizes being the greatest in the world means nothing if it costs him the most important person in his life.

  • @phillipbrown1467
    @phillipbrown1467 Рік тому +98

    My single mom would read these to me as a baby. I'm a single dad that read them to my son as a baby. My earliest memories are of reading 'Frog and Toad are Friends' with my mom. Its a part of what kind of dad I am now. It's an important series to me and it looks like lots of others. This video makes the world seem smaller. Less unfamiliar.

  • @Taffyart
    @Taffyart Рік тому +555

    I think the idea that the are Lobel's inner voices is actually really beautiful. Frog represents the voice of self love and acceptance, and toad is the critic, protector, and stability.

    • @deanmoriarty6015
      @deanmoriarty6015 Рік тому +24

      there’s something to be said about this dichotomy of “youthful childlike optimist” and “pessimistic worn down cynic” that seems present in memorable childhood media
      Emplemon has a video on Spongebob Squarepants and basically states that it’s not only memorable for us but also still connects with us now because the contrast of Spongebob and Squidward as duos. Spongebob is us when we’re younger and how we see the world, Squidward is how we see ourselves and the world when we’re older. i think this can apply to Frog and Toad as well. i remember thinking as a child, “why does Toad always complain, why can’t it go his way, etc etc” but as i’ve gotten older i realized i relate to Toad more than i’d ever have wanted to admit.

    • @Taffyart
      @Taffyart Рік тому +11

      @@deanmoriarty6015 It parallels voices in our minds that psychologists often say are there to protect us. A youthful view that looks at the world with wonder and excitement, and then a protective adult. I don't think the voices are diametrically opposed.
      I'd say that SpongeBob and Squidward seem to be at odds with one another, mostly from the adult voices distain for the youthful wonder, but with toad and frog they are like two sides of the same coin. They are more complimentary then at odds with one another. A lot of plot comes from the misunderstanding from their view points, much like SpongeBob. I do think that the show SpongeBob makes a bit of a judgement on the Squidward voice, that he is just opposed to SpongeBob in order to be opposed. The resolution in that show can often come in a form of punishment at Squidwards expense, for example the episode where SpongeBob gets Squidward to indulge in a Krabby patty and it ends with Squidwards thighs exploding. It seems a judgement on the adult voice, while frog and toad don't judge each voice and instead note the genuine care and love behind each other's actions. I could imagine frog getting carried away with burgers and toad being opposed or nervous, but then toad saving him then trying a burger only to admit he likes the burger, but moderation is a better way to enjoy snacks.

    • @Taffyart
      @Taffyart Рік тому +4

      I will check out Emplemon's video though and thanks for the reply :)

    • @ash.mystic
      @ash.mystic Рік тому +1

      Similarly, it also feels like a balance of feminine (intuitive/nurturing/right brain) and masculine (logical/protective/left brain) energy. Everyone has these in them, albeit in different ratios.

    • @xzysyndrome
      @xzysyndrome Рік тому

      It is a frog...and a toad. They are friends...they have stories. Damn Adults...ruin everything.

  • @soopyGG
    @soopyGG Рік тому +947

    11:47 "I realize I'm basically doing Kindergarten storytime with a bunch of 20-to-30 year olds"
    ok, and? what of it??
    keep going we love this

    • @emilyrln
      @emilyrln Рік тому +36

      I would unironically watch the hell out of that 😂

    • @DarkAngelEU
      @DarkAngelEU Рік тому +13

      Sounds like an idea for a performance/event :D

    • @JP-ve7or
      @JP-ve7or Рік тому +11

      Me, 48: man, I'm really not the target demographic here 🤭

    • @fweedle
      @fweedle Рік тому +5

      she has an audience for it :D

    • @kellil460
      @kellil460 Рік тому +7

      Add in at least one 50yo - gen x in the house! 😂

  • @FloatingSunfish
    @FloatingSunfish Рік тому +46

    As a frog, this honestly made me tear up a bit.
    What a wholesome series about two best friends enjoying the simple life together!

  • @saiyamoru
    @saiyamoru Рік тому +65

    This made me want to return to illustration. I'm an art student who really never did anything with their degree. I still graduated, but by that time I felt...burnt out. The passion went away at some point. I still remember that one of the best grades I ever got was from a children's illustration assignment. I really identified with the sentiment of 'making the world wholesome for kids, even if you don't feel it yourself'.

    • @jujubeethatsme
      @jujubeethatsme 11 місяців тому

      That's beautiful. I love illustration but I don't see many books or classes on it. So you recommend anything to get battery at it?

    • @kibs2563
      @kibs2563 6 місяців тому

      It feels like you're putting my thoughts into words, especially the sentiment. I also studied fine art for becoming a teacher, and I really love being a teacher. But my heart always beat for children's illustration and manga and comic and graphic novel and animation. University sucked the joy out of everything and I basically stopped working on anything until .... now, to be honest. I graduated three years ago and I love being a teacher really much, but I just wish that part of me hadn't died. I hope I can revive it one day. And I hope you will be able to do it, too.

  • @NCHProductions
    @NCHProductions Рік тому +2005

    the one story from frog and toad that burnt deep into memory was the cookie story. the whole will power to not finish all the cookies...
    somehow, the illustrations for that particular stories, esp how they eat the cookies in every moment just really got me as a kid. always felt like I wanted to eat cookies after reading the story.
    it just feels "tasty" just seeing them eat the cookies in the drawing lol.... very rare I get such an effect from drawings so this is quite an exception.

    • @rhythmandblues_alibi
      @rhythmandblues_alibi Рік тому +30

      I felt the same way about the ice cream cone story, even though the ice cream is kind of grey and weird looking haha ☺️👌

    • @connor48880
      @connor48880 Рік тому +16

      I always remember the one where Toad has that weird dream about performing on stage where Frog keeps shrinking

    • @patrickm6009
      @patrickm6009 Рік тому +33

      If you listen to Arnold Lobel's reading of the cookie story, you actually hear him pausing to munch on some cookies.

    • @connor48880
      @connor48880 Рік тому +10

      @@patrickm6009 THAT'S ADORABLE

    • @thecapone45
      @thecapone45 Рік тому +21

      Hate if this sours the mood but I sometimes think of this story when I’m struggling with not drinking booze and I think of this story and tell myself to not drink. Crazy how getting older turned the cookies to the bottle for me. 😅

  • @hippothehippo
    @hippothehippo Рік тому +166

    "The kind of person whom, when something goes wrong, goes to bed."
    Lobel has a better bead on me than any therapist ever has.

    • @emilysmith2965
      @emilysmith2965 Рік тому +2

      Ahem, definitely not me watching from bed

  • @phoeberose2429
    @phoeberose2429 Рік тому +28

    It might seem silly but about 10 minutes into this video I started crying, it wasn't quite a sad cry it was almost nostalgic of being a child and not knowing what emotion I was feeling. It was the most ok I had felt in a very long time, like I just let myself be and realised I was not alone. Thank you

  • @DarkVideogamer
    @DarkVideogamer Рік тому +66

    I really like how in the alone story, neither is really shamed for how they feel. Cause there are people who often conflate being alone with being lonely, which I think is what Toad was doing.
    But he had entirely good intentions and wanted to make sure his friend didn't feel like he was alone, that they were still friends who could be there for each other. But Frog wasn't shamed for wanting to take time to himself to reflect on everything, wasn't told he was being anti-social or bad for taking time for himself. He simply just needed to communicate that with Toad and was more then content to enjoy their wet lunch together.
    it's just so sweet and touching.

  • @blumeshullman8002
    @blumeshullman8002 Рік тому +97

    The "wishing the best for children without enjoying their company" is something i deeply relate to.

  • @pnuthead13
    @pnuthead13 Рік тому +163

    As a little girl I remember my child mind reacting to the stories often with deep concern for the characters. I was an anxious child. I read them to my son in my early 20’s and I watched his little face accept the stories for face value. He’s a kind person. In my late 40’s I’ve read them to my grandson who regularly interjects with frank, demanding questions. He is a quintessential, passionate problem solver.
    These books have been a joy in my life and I treasure them.
    Also I took the cookies at face value for portion control and will power struggles with food because that story was always just too real. 😂

  • @createone100
    @createone100 Рік тому +28

    I read these to and with my son when he was a little guy. He’s nearly 47! Where did those years go!? We both have such lovely memories of the truly delightful ‘Frog and Toad’ books. Just precious. ♥️

  • @nesekaba
    @nesekaba Рік тому +176

    The vibes of Frog and Toad remind me of Little Bear. Cozy, slow, simple, laid back. There was a Little Bear episode about Winter Solstice that has stayed salient in my brain since I watched it as a small child.

    • @LpsRoseGold
      @LpsRoseGold 8 місяців тому

      I love the winter solstice episode too! (⁠・⁠∀⁠・⁠) It reminds me of all the feelings of a good Christmas!

    • @weaponizedmemes3461
      @weaponizedmemes3461 8 місяців тому +2

      Little Bear is one of the best children’s shows I’ve seen.
      The music and illustrations are so beautiful and the vibe is more appropriate for kids than modern shows are.

  • @somepunkinthecomments471
    @somepunkinthecomments471 Рік тому +370

    This actually was very comforting for me. Sometimes I feel like self help videos come from a perspective of an adult with adult problems, when sometimes there are childhood problems plaguing adulthood, so you have to approach the issues as if you were a kid still. I'm off to wash the dishes I've been putting off for nearly a month now. Thank you.

  • @smileyp4535
    @smileyp4535 Рік тому +207

    Imagine a computer 2d animated movie about frog and toad in the water color aesthetic of the story books :)

  • @SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand
    @SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand Рік тому +59

    These books were very important to me as a child, and I highly respect these great works of art.
    R.I.P. Arnold Lobel.

  • @calebtaylor4153
    @calebtaylor4153 Рік тому +32

    I remember, the first one I had (maybe the only one), and it was about Frog and Toad being unable to stop themselves from eating cookies. Later on, when I was older, I came to interpret it as a metaphor for handling addictions.

  • @femoman
    @femoman Рік тому +517

    You basically nailed one of the big drawbacks of cottagecore: it was never designed to be feasible as anything more than an aesthetic. It's mostly embraced by city dwellers who yearn for that quiet pastoral country life they see in stuff like this, little realising that the reality tends to be much grittier, messier and less comfortable. Country life isn't easy, especially farmlife where nowadays the options are basically to work on an industrial scale or to be really poor. This is probably why Cottagecore had that boom during the lockdowns when people could live their cosy country life fantasy of prairie dresses and flowerpressing and sourdough, but gradually faded as people realised that as a lifestyle, Cottagecore is unsustainable for most.

    • @pocketsand6776
      @pocketsand6776 Рік тому +17

      Media like this forms a chain back to that era which I guess Cottagecore attempts to re invoke. Either you have a so called "authentic" relation to pastoral life via your family, or you receive it as a mediated experience. It's all mediated now, you don't need to make your own flax linen from scratch etc. - and this is good!

    • @thehypercasual385
      @thehypercasual385 Рік тому +73

      but yearning for a cottage core lifestyle is not a bad thing. learning to grow a garden and make your own food, clothes, etc is a good thing.

    • @TheSuperRatt
      @TheSuperRatt Рік тому +49

      That's kind of doing it a disservice. Cottagecore is a nostalgic escapism. Just like any fantasy, it serves a purpose. We can't have it, obviously, but that doesn't mean we can't emulate its spirit of finding joy in the little things, in quiet moments. It teaches us that we CAN be small, we can have sparse moments when we aren't being productive for our masters and just live for ourselves and the people we love. This attitude is sorely needed in a culture where "productivity" has become everything. In my country, if you aren't squeezing every drop of "usefulness" out of yourself every moment of the day, then you're considered worthless. A leech, a parasite. It's good to be told this isn't true.

    • @deanmoriarty6015
      @deanmoriarty6015 Рік тому +17

      cottage core as a trend seems more like an overcompensation for how hustle and bustle everyone’s life is, urban and suburban, but what they don’t realize is rural living isn’t all just kickbacks and hanging out doing nothing.
      i dont necessarily blame anybody for yearning for this kind of thing though. a break from interaction, a break from the concrete that surrounds us. most suburbs and urban areas don’t strike that balance of nature and civilization we as humans crave. (atleast in the us) there’s not many places to forget about your responsibilities for a bit. i live in midwest suburbia but there’s hardly any trees, any paths, anywhere for me to just take a bit of time off without sacrificing my entire way of life as is. if i even want a slice of it, i need to get in my car and drive atleast an hour.
      i’m rambling but i think people just crave that balance that hasn’t been given to us. of course we need to work, but we also need passions, hobbies, ways to disconnect for a little bit. ways to feel human that isn’t through a phone or a car or a workplace. i don’t know, just my take on it

    • @femoman
      @femoman Рік тому +14

      @@deanmoriarty6015 That's a fair point. Nothing wrong with escapism. It's just that for a lot of people Cottagecore is less about actually escaping the grind and emulating the quiet country life, and more about just looking like you do. It's like the main problem with the Dark Academia aesthetic, which is that it seems less concerned with actually being well-read and intellectual, and more with just looking the part. Like give Goblincore some credit, at least its philosophy is about more than just looking the part.

  • @m.donez8
    @m.donez8 Рік тому +60

    frog and toad is like getting a warm hug from an old friend 🥲

  • @pumitriii6160
    @pumitriii6160 Рік тому +31

    Never thought someone could so articulately describe the indescribable feeling you get from Frog and Toad... but here we are

  • @Thejackofirishdiamon
    @Thejackofirishdiamon Рік тому +13

    Frog and Toad were among my first books that I ever owned. My first grade teacher bought one for me. That woman was a blessing to the world around her.

  • @waitsbian
    @waitsbian Рік тому +220

    when i was in first grade, i read ‘alone.’ it meant so much for me as a asocial autistic kid who never really connected with other people, who would get chastised when i played alone and for not including other people, who would rather pace between trees whispering to myself than talk with anyone else at recess. it taught me that wanting to be solitary was ok.

  • @IrismonoYT
    @IrismonoYT Рік тому +116

    I actually called on Frog and Toad for one of my college application essays (wish me luck!). It's an example of perfect friendship, and one where (critically) they're not perfect equals. They are, by nature, different creatures, even if they're both amphibians. Frog is taller, more pleasant in demeanor, more even-headed, by most metrics he is Toad's superior. But that doesn't stop them from being friends. This is counter to several philosophical beliefs about friendship, particularly Aristotle's, who asserted that friendship among men was difficult and friendship between men and women impossible. Frog and Toad provides a beautiful example of the counterargument, that friendship is very much possible among unequals, all it really requires is altruism.

    • @emilysmith2965
      @emilysmith2965 Рік тому +5

      Counterpoint: people do not have to be THE SAME in order to be philosophically equal. Frankly, your characterization of women as inherently inferior is antiquated and not at all appropriate.

    • @IrismonoYT
      @IrismonoYT Рік тому +20

      @@emilysmith2965 I think you misunderstand my argument. I am in fact arguing that equality is not neccesary for friendship, which goes against Aristotle's notions.
      I do not believe women to be inherently inferior, though I do believe men and women to be different, even if many of the diferences are culturally based.
      Apples and Oranges are both fruit, and they can both be put in a fruit salad, and both be tasty, but they are nonetheless different, and there are some jobs apples do better than oranges and vice versa. Aristotle would argue there could be no friendship between apples and oranges, frogs and toads, or men and women, I disagree.

  • @FatefulMedia3383
    @FatefulMedia3383 10 місяців тому +8

    To me this seems like Frog is the adult to Toad's manifestation of the inner child. Constantly cultivateing him to have the best life possible together.❤

  • @shonuff9655
    @shonuff9655 Рік тому +2

    This is some cozy youtube content. The music, the frog and toad, the gentle narration, I'm smoking my morning joint with coffee in my friends backyard in small town texas, slightly overcast with a good breeze. This is a vibe.
    I need more of these mornings in my life.

  • @streterttrrttrr356
    @streterttrrttrr356 Рік тому +415

    I don't know if it's intentional or not, but lately you've been posting lots of videos that I would put into the "Healing for the Soul" category (this is one of them too) and I thank you for that❣

    • @QualityCulture
      @QualityCulture  Рік тому +45

      Thank you, I really appreciate that 😊

    • @tammygant4216
      @tammygant4216 Рік тому +10

      yes! I was trying to articulate that feeling I was feeling as I was listening, but I couldn't quite name it. You nailed it!

  • @mmps18
    @mmps18 Рік тому +120

    I just bought all the Frog and Toad books for our son! I loved those growing up in the 1990s. So classic and wholesome and good.

  • @kellicos
    @kellicos Рік тому +12

    I loved “Owl at Home”. In particular the story about tear-water tea. 40+ years later I still remember that.

  • @lo_efilled
    @lo_efilled Рік тому +13

    stumbling onto this without any prior knowledge to the toad and the frog and i ended up so overwhelmed w love and wholesome feelings in my heart by the end of it. thank you, im so glad you exist.

  •  Рік тому +231

    love how this lures 'escapists to a simpler live' into reflecting their privileges in such a nice way, without the unhelpful and unjustified shaming that usually goes along with it.

  • @alexisgonzaludo4949
    @alexisgonzaludo4949 Рік тому +188

    As a domestically inclined person, it’s nice to feel seen! Our culture totally overvalues travel and being on the go. I used to feel insecure about how I don’t travel for personal leisure as often as my peers, but I get a lot of satisfaction from making my space comfy and clean. I’m glad to have a reminder that that’s ok too.

    • @sandraperez2238
      @sandraperez2238 Рік тому +8

      Wow! I’m the same too! It’s so comforting to be home.

    • @JennsCorner777
      @JennsCorner777 Рік тому +8

      So when I was younger I used to want to travel the world. Growing into my 30's I felt really sad I hadn't lived that travel lifestyle. The more I learned about the world and countries I wanted to visit the less romanticized the idea became. My sister has traveled extensively as well as other family members and with the social media I see more of the world than I had before. Basically what I'm saying is now that I know more about the world and the countries I wanted to visit...the less I actually want to travel. What no one talks about are the dangers, the unkind people you encounter, language barriers, how certain tourist spots aren't worth it and are overcrowded. There's a lot more to traveling than going around and enjoying a vacation. It's not all it's cracked up to be I have learned and now don't feel badly about not traveling the world and am wiser about which places I'd like to see and which ones are hyped up or just downright unfriendly or dangerous. Don't feel badly about it. Plan a trip you'd want to go on, save up, research and see if it's really someplace worthwhile going from others that have gone that will note the good and bad. Traveling is fun and worthwhile but it isn't the end all be all. There is something to be said about having a home space that is your own and having be a safe and comforting place for you and others. Home is underrated and exotic locales are overrated. As the saying goes home is where the heart is and in the words of Dorothy- There's no place like home.

    • @nihilego3634
      @nihilego3634 Рік тому +1

      I never really liked traveling. I much prefer my bed.

  • @ForlornFoundry
    @ForlornFoundry Рік тому +18

    I hope you feel at least half of the overwhelming sense of comfort and joy I felt watching your breakdown of a childhood classic of mine. Your calm, soft narration and editing really brought this to the next level of video essays 😌

  • @CaptainCaliansAdventures
    @CaptainCaliansAdventures Рік тому +7

    I usually never watch these kinds of videos but after takin’ some time to lend an ear, I learned a lot and understood more about why this storybook brought me so much interest, peace and joy all these years as well as Studio Ghibli. I would read some of the stories with my niece during bedtime and always wondered why I felt so connected to their stories despite growin’ up in the rough parts of the city. This was a very well explained and thoughtful video. Thank ye very much.

  • @adelaide22
    @adelaide22 Рік тому +119

    I actually started crying with your summary of "Surprise," I've never seen that story before and it touched me so deeply. It's so hard to do acts of kindness and derive joy from them without the expectation of a reward, and it's so beautiful that such a deeply emotional concept can be expressed so simply in a single story.

    • @aethrya
      @aethrya Рік тому +1

      Y'er kinda cute ;)

  • @randybobandy4801
    @randybobandy4801 Рік тому +85

    Frog and Toad have always resonated with me. I lived in the country for the better part (in both senses of the word better) of my life. We are to this day lower middle class and I lived at home til very late. But for about 17 years I just rode my bike or walked over to someone’s house without calling and knocked on the door, and “hanging out” could literally mean helping with some little chore or just standing around looking at the scenery. We used to walk through the woods or down the roads for hours just philosophizing and riffing on things. And if my good friend next door, a grumpy but hilarious retired marine, was going to the shop to work on someone’s car or the grocery store or somewhere in town, he might call me or just stop by and see if I wanted to go with, just to pass some time in extremely idle conversation. There’s a stereotype that country people are not communal and that just isn’t so; I can tell you that in my experience, having to move into a neighborhood in the exurbs/suburbs is far lonelier than the rural life I used to have. That a community is small and not especially busy doesn’t mean it is not bound together with love and vivacity. You could call all that nostalgia but I experienced it as an adult up until a few years ago. Being alone together with a small, but close and trusted, extended family. One day again Inshallah

    • @yasminflower5140
      @yasminflower5140 Рік тому +5

      Same....i actually knew more people when me and my family used to live in a small village, now i barely know my neighbors

  • @ladyibis580
    @ladyibis580 Рік тому +11

    I was so pleased to see you mention Mary Oliver, she's one of my favourite poets. My favourite piece of hers has to be 'The Swan', especially the closing lines of the poem:
    _And did you feel it, in your heart, how it pertained to everything?_
    _And have you too finally figured out what beauty is for?_
    _And have you changed your life?_

  • @alfredopasta218
    @alfredopasta218 Рік тому +39

    I decided to pause this video, go for a walk in the fresh air, and finish later. This video is so comforting. Thank you! 🤍

  • @wonderwhyiwonder3458
    @wonderwhyiwonder3458 Рік тому +186

    I never realized Lobel was gay. It does add a certain poignancy, and also makes that quote about Hans Christian Anderson funnier somehow. ""Being alone together" is an all time classic quote for me.

  • @samerinaa
    @samerinaa 11 місяців тому +7

    I loved frog & toad when i was a kid!! 💚💚I didn’t realize they had themes that adults relate to more than kids-now i want to go read them again!

  • @GotchaProductions
    @GotchaProductions Рік тому +6

    That little story about willpower and cookies still stuck to me to this day. Loved these books growing up

  • @giovanniorellana2200
    @giovanniorellana2200 Рік тому +60

    I loved Frog and Toad growing up, and somehow this has never left my memories all these years later!

  • @natalydevous
    @natalydevous Рік тому +54

    The ending of this video (starting around 26:50) made me choke up, specifically the way frog and toad can represent our relationships with others and with ourselves. I like that the author was writing for himself, but created something in the process that is relatable to kids and adults alike. Really inspiring 💚

  • @kyannastrain9247
    @kyannastrain9247 Рік тому +8

    Pleaseeeeee do more videos like this! I know you can’t tell an artist what to focus on and how to put out their content, but I literally watch this on repeat. It brings me so much comfort and genuine appreciation for literature, arts, the books, my life, love, EVERYTHING. Thank you for this video. ❤

  • @rossim1918
    @rossim1918 Рік тому +7

    Each night after taking care of our mother during her last days which was emotionally draining, my two sisters and I would watch one of the Frog and Toad stories on UA-cam to help our hearts heal. Thank you for your insight on the author and stories, you warmed my heart. ❤

  • @dillblas9139
    @dillblas9139 Рік тому +48

    I remember reading these in like 2nd and 3rd grade. That's 11 years ago. Cool to hear it's still being shown to some students

  • @PabloKMorillo
    @PabloKMorillo Рік тому +27

    this video broke my heart in a way that will only make it stronger

  • @citrusjuicebox
    @citrusjuicebox Рік тому +5

    Around the same time this video was published, I suddenly felt nostalgic for Frog and Toad, and I bought a copy of the omnibus. I read it again and a lot of childhood memories welled up. Thank you for making this video.

  • @GabbaGh0ul
    @GabbaGh0ul Рік тому +3

    'Tomorrow' is a great concept for a story (as are the others!) - we are all so used and accustomed to "oh that is a problem for future me" but recently I have tried to adopt the mindset that tomorrow's me is a friend that I should look to help because he needs/deserves it. I prepare my coffee maker the night before work, I food prep early in the day for dinner later, check off my to-do list early so I can relax in the evening, and so on. It really has helped not just my future self but also my present self because I am less distracted by games/movies/etc. and doing more. Thank you Frog and Toad and thank you QC!

  • @NuriaLuce
    @NuriaLuce Рік тому +757

    I just love the feeling that two beloved series, "Frog and Toad" and "Moomin", had found an important place on the queer community. Both authors (also lgbt) could look at today and see how their stories feel so like home to part of their community, with their cozy and nearly cottagecore feelings.

    • @QualityCulture
      @QualityCulture  Рік тому +72

      That’s a very sweet thought :)

    • @thebigcanoftuna
      @thebigcanoftuna Рік тому +21

      I didn't know that the authors were lgbtq but I loved and still love Frog and Toad and the Moomintrolls. They're very popular in my home country. The stories are very wholesome and cute ❤️

    • @oliviasommerville4733
      @oliviasommerville4733 Рік тому +35

      I always loved the idea of a “found family”, which involves familial or strong platonic bonds instead of romantic ones. Frog and Toad are a good example of this.

    • @hi-ve1cw
      @hi-ve1cw Рік тому +15

      @@thebigcanoftuna the author of frog and toad was a closeted gay man, he had a wife and kids and came out as gay late in life. After his death his daughter said she thinks her dad wrote the books as a way to express and come to terms with his own homosexuality. They're books about two male frogs who clearly love eachother, their relationship is like that of an old married couple

    • @JohnRBIV
      @JohnRBIV Рік тому

      Yeah and now everybody thinks I wanna bang a dude because I want to live in a hobbit hole thanks guys

  • @joemathewson4198
    @joemathewson4198 Рік тому +37

    I feel like i read these as a child but I really remember the meme going around where toad said “we must stop eating” as he ate another.
    Describes my life perfectly lol

  • @uhsaywhatnow
    @uhsaywhatnow Рік тому +3

    I’ve bought this books series as a gift for every baby shower I’ve ever attended. Frog & Toad are a rad childhood vibe.

  • @kseniav586
    @kseniav586 Рік тому +60

    Thank you for this beautiful video! I'm not a native English speaker and have never read the books as a kid. I really loved stories about anthropomorphic animals though and it was nice to learn these stories through your video. Also, no book is ever "too simple" for analysis or a critical literacy class, children's books especially. It always good to see such authors taken seriously.

  • @RuviGaPo
    @RuviGaPo Рік тому +46

    Treating future me as a friend or even a co worker is genuinely helpful. It's like... oh heck future me is a person !! I should help make their job easier!

    • @fineandnatural
      @fineandnatural Рік тому +1

      That's an awesome philosophy/advice

    • @RuviGaPo
      @RuviGaPo Рік тому

      @@fineandnatural thank you !! Lol i like to find ways to trick my brain into caring about my well weing even tho it's hard, given we're all just in our heads all the time.
      Extermalizing your well being is like.. one way to go about it like,, i feel good when i take care of my flowers, but i don't think of it as doing it for Me, i'm doing it for the flowers, and vise versa.
      It also just has the added benefit of feeling less alone so Yay !!

    • @thefrog4990
      @thefrog4990 Рік тому +1

      I love this. I really should treat myself better.

  • @alexejv.1969
    @alexejv.1969 Рік тому +5

    I've never read this book (I´m from Easter Europe) but I´ve seen it a lot. I´m happy that I found your video because, MAN, am I going to read this book now. There are just a lot of feelings I've been having lately that this book seems to describe. Thank you so much for introducing me to this book!

  • @Strabius
    @Strabius 7 місяців тому +2

    As a kid i was only familiar with a couple of frog and toad stories, one of them being Cookies, but learning now about The Button and The Surprise as an adult touched me deeply to tears, it's such pure love that we all can aspire to share with the ones we care about in our own lives.

  • @JMoore-vo7ii
    @JMoore-vo7ii Рік тому +37

    My dad and I reference the cookie jar story ALL the time! There is an element of simple storytelling here that can be a good point of reference for any artist. Just look at Lobel's descriptions of Toad or the fact he "didn't know what he was doing".
    Thank for this! :)

    • @heathergarnham9555
      @heathergarnham9555 Рік тому +3

      My family tend to lean towards the Tomorrow story. Habits of procrastination but willing to get stuff done so we can procrastinate Tomorrow

  • @sarahmcdowell5919
    @sarahmcdowell5919 Рік тому +38

    I love this, I grew up reading these books. I love diving into philosophy and learning about the patterns we fall into as we grow up and become adults. Sometimes taking a step back and realizing “oh I don’t have to do this, I can try a different way or think differently” is really powerful and freeing, but it’s often difficult for us to realize we have this ability. Stellar video, and I really enjoyed your analysis.

  • @sundownsahara
    @sundownsahara Рік тому +6

    As a Children's Librarian I love this, thanks for making it!

  • @tacthom
    @tacthom Рік тому +4

    These are the books of my childhood 😍, so sweet, innocent, and special. I would read them every summer ritually and habitually.

  • @Thekawaiiasian101vid
    @Thekawaiiasian101vid Рік тому +22

    i used to read these books all the time at my local library. i didn’t expect to ever see a video essay on them but this is so pure

  • @songpoetry1
    @songpoetry1 Рік тому +17

    I must admit that I wasn't familiar with frog and toad before and got here via UA-cam algorithm, but now I want them for my kids. Such wholesome stories. It spoke to my soul when you mentioned kids appreciating stories with substance as well. It's always bothered me that there aren't more of the deeper type of stories for children.

  • @valeriefrazier7830
    @valeriefrazier7830 11 місяців тому +1

    Not just 20 and 30 year olds. 66 here. Never heard of frog and toad. This was fascinating! Thank you.

  • @DrDingsGaster
    @DrDingsGaster Рік тому +15

    I love Frog and Toad. They were some of my favourite books to read growing up and their messages and life speaks to me even now. I also wasn't expecting to tear up at the conclusion xD;

  • @SaltySirenFloriduh
    @SaltySirenFloriduh Рік тому +8

    As a homeschooling mama who gets to explore the classic, nostalgia inducing books of my childhood all over again, I really enjoyed this video. It explains why I love this series so much myself.

  • @carolinecrowley3385
    @carolinecrowley3385 Рік тому +116

    Didn't plan to spend my Sunday crying over a philosophical analysis of 2 gay frogs, but here i am living for it

    • @honeywren
      @honeywren Рік тому +5

      literally me i sobbed throughout this video

    • @esotericvv1244
      @esotericvv1244 Рік тому +1

      I saved this video for later
      please don't tell me they are gay.... ffs

    • @chashubokchoy8999
      @chashubokchoy8999 Рік тому +1

      @@esotericvv1244hey can be anything you want them to be. “death of the artist” theory, authorial intent is nil. though i do think he intended them to be gay.

  • @ShamanJeeves
    @ShamanJeeves Рік тому +6

    Subscribed! Not nearly enough adults recognize the importance of truly good literature for children. This was a triumph of a video, and I look forward to viewing more of your productions.

  • @pittsburghlife32
    @pittsburghlife32 Рік тому +3

    My mom used to read these to me as a kid seeing this definitely brought back some memories

  • @MJ-dj4yf
    @MJ-dj4yf Рік тому +14

    I didn't expect to cry while watching this video. But I did.

  • @sweeneylens
    @sweeneylens Рік тому +14

    I didn’t grow up with this book series, so this was a delightful introduction to Frog and Toad. Thanks for sharing this. And happy autumn!

  • @maddyc2412
    @maddyc2412 4 місяці тому

    Me and my mother used to listen to rhe audiobooks while we baked, some of the best memories I have or will ever have. Frog and Toad are so special to me so it's beautiful to see that so many people can relate

  • @josequintana1457
    @josequintana1457 Рік тому +10

    This kind of content is rare and I really appreciate it 🙌🏼 thank you !

  • @KMRossy
    @KMRossy Рік тому +11

    My mom would read these to me all the time! I loved how relaxing your video was about Frog and Toad, it made me feel soothed, like I was back listening to my mom reading to me. 💕

    • @QualityCulture
      @QualityCulture  Рік тому +2

      How sweet, thank you 🥺❤️

    • @KMRossy
      @KMRossy Рік тому +1

      @@QualityCulture 💖💖

  • @RedApples91
    @RedApples91 Рік тому +21

    This was so lovely!!! I never read the stories as a child, but I'm sure I would've loved them. You talked about a lot of things that I'm working on/struggling with in my life (feeling petrified by how much I should be doing or learning how to appreciate all the little things in life for example). It's comforting to know, that these struggles and feelings are universal.

  • @Fredyy33
    @Fredyy33 Рік тому +1

    I never heard of frog and toad but you reading them and talking about them was heartwarming. Def will show them to my niece

  • @88amona
    @88amona Рік тому +7

    I just remember growing up and thinking how wild these bros weekends were and how they lived simple yet fun lives. I now read this to my kids and observe their curiosity with these characters and their adventures. Good times 😎🤙

  • @themightylordhelix5233
    @themightylordhelix5233 Рік тому +4

    God I remember this.. A beloved teacher of mine absolutely adored frogs and she read these stories to us in 2nd grade. She made me love reading and my life never would’ve been the literary filled one it is now without her and these amphibians.

  • @JustAnotherNameYo
    @JustAnotherNameYo Рік тому +5

    I moved to Panama for two years when I was little and had only brought 4 books one of them being Frog and Toad Together. I read over and over and over again during those years. I hadn’t yet learned Spanish yet and they were the only English books we had for me. Frog and Toad gave me a lot of comfort. Thanks for reminding me of something I’d forgotten.

  • @thesisypheanjournal1271
    @thesisypheanjournal1271 Рік тому +1

    "Alone" is my FAVORITE Frog and Toad story!

  • @caseyeckels1826
    @caseyeckels1826 11 місяців тому +3

    Although this was long, it was so so resonating with me! On so many levels! I love your video
    I read these books to my kids. I adored them. I am now 71… they were always very Zen to me and full of joy, that polarity between frog and toad was perfect, your video articulates my inner experience perfectly… My own pool from adventure to wanting to just nest, and it was very touching to find out that Arnold was gay, I always sensed that tender love between frog and toad, and wondered, but at the end it never mattered it was just love❤

  • @graciemargot8689
    @graciemargot8689 Рік тому +20

    My favourite channel talking about my favourite childhood books 🥰🍂🐸

  • @hopemonsod
    @hopemonsod Рік тому +19

    MAN I STARTED TEARING UP NEAR THE END, THIS BOOK IS SO GODDAMN WHOLESOME, I SHOULD GIVE IT A READ SOMETIME😭😭
    Amazing video, keep up the good work! Subbed!

  • @SongbirdAlom
    @SongbirdAlom 7 місяців тому +1

    Re: Sendak
    He actually came to my elementary school and read Where the Wild Things are to us. I will always remember that. I was in kindegarten.
    If he was anxious or uncomfortable to be near us, I don't remember him being so. It was a long time ago.
    great video!

  • @jaythomas468
    @jaythomas468 5 місяців тому +2

    Idk what it is, maybe I’m just becoming a giant wuss as I get older, but when I’m reminded of these books again, IT MAKES MY HEART ACHE.
    They were SO WHOLESOME and a big part of my early childhood.

  • @rhythmandblues_alibi
    @rhythmandblues_alibi Рік тому +22

    I'd never seen the claymation before and at first I found it creepy (the lack of necks 😳) but it kind of grew on me and I really liked the voice acting too. So thanks for including that.

  • @1handedtyper
    @1handedtyper Рік тому +52

    I remember the one where, I think it was Toad, didn't want to come out of the river because he embarrassed of his l bathing suit, but his refusal to one out only drew more attention toward him. The be honest, it was a pretty funny looking bathing suit.🐸
    These only first came out in 2003, but you know what's a series of children's books that I feel are great, but nobody ever talks about them? The "Edgar & Ellen" series. Rather than be8ng wholesome, they're about two creapy twins, who live alone in a tower mansion, and go around being obnoxious. In the first book, Edgar commits a felony because it gave him pleasure to cause physical harm to an elderly man. Earlier in that same book, there's a seen where he's tied up, as Ellen swings a sharp blade over him, slowing drawing it closer to him.

    • @kindred239
      @kindred239 Рік тому +12

      Not gonna lie, I thought this was going in a wholesome direction till I read the end. You had me in the first half, but things got worriedly violent real quick. 😰

    • @thefrog4990
      @thefrog4990 Рік тому +1

      I remember this one too! One of my favorites!