A tiny parrot named Pip shows kids that even the smallest brave actions can make a big difference in this Faithfully Explore story about courage, kindness, and helping others.
🎧 Listen to the Episode
Episode Overview
Length
🕛 10 mins
Host
🎙️ Laura Menousek
Release Date
June 4, 2026
Journey Highlights
- Meet Pip the Parrot
- A tiny green parrot with a huge heart shows explorers that being small doesn’t mean being powerless.
- Step Into the Jungle
- Kids travel into a warm, colorful forest filled with monkeys, mango trees, flowers, and the sounds of nature.
- A Forest in Danger
- When smoke rises, and fire threatens Pip’s home, the other animals run—but Pip decides to help.
- One Brave Drop at a Time
- Pip dips herself in the river again and again, carrying tiny drops of water to the flames.
- The Eagle Learns a Lesson
- A powerful eagle laughs at Pip’s small effort—until her courage changes his heart.
- Big Idea: Small Actions Matter
- Explorers discover that one kind, brave action can inspire others and help make a big difference.
- Belief Backpack Takeaway
- “Even small actions make a big difference!” Kids are invited to look for their own tiny hero moments at home, school, and in their community.
For Parents and Educators
This episode helps children understand that they do not have to be big, powerful, or perfect to make a difference. Pip’s story is a wonderful way to talk about courage, kindness, persistence, and the power of small actions.
Conversation Starters
What made Pip brave?
Was it because she knew she could put out the fire, or because she tried even when the problem felt too big?
Have you ever felt too small to help?
Talk about a time when your child wanted to help but wasn’t sure their action would matter.
Why did the Eagle change his mind?
Help children notice that Pip’s courage inspired someone bigger and stronger to take action.
What is one “drop of kindness” you can give this week?
Ideas might include inviting someone to play, picking up trash, helping at home, sharing supplies, or saying something encouraging.
Try This at Home or in the Classroom
Create a “Tiny Hero Moments” jar.
Each time a child does something kind, brave, or helpful, write it on a slip of paper and add it to the jar. At the end of the week, read the moments together.
Act out the story.
Assign roles for Pip, the Eagle, the animals, the river, and the fire. Let children retell the story using movement, sound effects, and simple props.
Make a kindness ripple chart.
Choose one small action and trace what might happen next. For example: “I invited someone to play → they felt included → they smiled → they invited someone else.”
Connect it to real life.
Talk about helpers in your community. Firefighters, teachers, neighbors, friends, and family members all make a difference through steady, caring actions.
Extension Activities
Art: Draw Pip carrying one tiny drop of water. Around the picture, write or draw small ways kids can help.
Writing: Finish the sentence: “One small thing I can do to help is…”
Science Connection: Discuss forest fires, water, smoke, and how real firefighters help protect forests and communities.
Social-Emotional Learning: Use Pip’s story to practice naming feelings: worried, brave, tired, discouraged, proud, inspired.
Big Takeaway
Remind children that Pip did not save the forest by being the biggest or strongest. She helped by doing what she could, one drop at a time. That is a message children can carry into friendships, family life, school, and their community.
Dive Deeper
The story of Pip the parrot echoes a powerful theme found across many wisdom traditions: small acts of courage can awaken compassion in others. Pip does not have the strength to stop the fire alone, but she refuses to let helplessness become an excuse for inaction. Her tiny drops of water become a symbol of persistence, love, and moral courage.
This kind of story is especially meaningful for children because it speaks to something they often feel: I’m too little to help. Adults may recognize the same feeling in a different form: The problem is too big. My effort won’t matter. Pip’s response is simple but profound—do the good you can do, even when the outcome is uncertain.
The Eagle’s transformation is also important. At first, he sees Pip’s effort as foolish because he measures power only by size and strength. But Pip’s determination changes his heart. This reminds us that courageous action does not only affect the problem in front of us; it can also inspire others to join in.
For adults, this episode can open conversations about service, environmental care, community responsibility, and emotional resilience. Pip’s “one drop” can become a family or classroom metaphor for small but meaningful acts: one kind word, one repaired friendship, one piece of litter picked up, one brave apology, one moment of standing up for someone else.
The deeper lesson is not that children must fix enormous problems by themselves. It is that children can learn to see themselves as capable contributors. They can notice needs, respond with compassion, and trust that small actions are not wasted. Sometimes, one brave drop is what helps someone else find the courage to act too.
Books about Small Actions Making a Big Difference
This week’s Faithfully Explore episode reminds kids that even the smallest actions can make a big difference. Pip the parrot may be tiny, but her brave little drops of water help inspire something much bigger. These picture books beautifully extend that same message through stories of kindness, courage, care for the earth, and hope.
The Curious Garden
by Peter Brown

In The Curious Garden, one child discovers a struggling garden and decides to care for it. At first, the garden is small and fragile, but with patience and attention, it begins to spread and transform the world around it.
This book pairs beautifully with Pip’s story because it shows children that change often begins with one person noticing something that needs care. Just like Pip carries one drop of water at a time, Liam tends one small garden at a time. Both stories remind kids that small, steady actions can grow into something wonderful.
Pair it with the episode by asking:
What is one small thing you could care for this week?
Something, Someday
by Amanda Gorman, illustrated by Christian Robinson

Something, Someday is a hopeful story about seeing a problem and choosing to begin anyway. It gently shows children that big challenges can feel overwhelming, but one small action can lead to another—and another—until change starts to grow.
This is a perfect companion to Pip’s “tiny hero” message. Kids may not be able to fix every problem by themselves, but they can still do something. A kind word, a helping hand, a brave choice, or one small act of care can matter more than they realize.
Pair it with the episode by asking:
Have you ever seen a problem and wondered, “What can I do?”
Be Kind
by Pat Zietlow Miller, illustrated by Jen Hill

Be Kind helps children understand that kindness is not always one big, dramatic gesture. Sometimes kindness looks like noticing someone, including them, helping quietly, or simply trying again when a first attempt does not go perfectly.
This book connects especially well with the “drops of kindness” idea from the episode. Pip gives what she can, one tiny drop at a time. Be Kind helps children see that their everyday choices can be tiny drops too—sharing, listening, encouraging, apologizing, or helping someone feel less alone.
Pair it with the episode by asking:
What is one “drop of kindness” you could give today?
The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest
by Lynne Cherry

In The Great Kapok Tree, readers travel deep into the Amazon rainforest, where animals speak up for the trees, the forest, and the home they all share. It is a beautiful way to help children think about nature, responsibility, and why protecting habitats matters.
This book pairs naturally with Pip’s jungle setting and forest-saving courage. Both stories invite children to care about the living world around them and to understand that forests are full of life. It also opens the door for thoughtful conversations about environmental care in a way children can understand.
Pair it with the episode by asking:
Why do forests matter to animals, people, and the earth?
Keep Exploring
After listening to the episode and reading these books, invite kids to start their own Tiny Hero Moments challenge. They can look for small ways to help at home, at school, outside, or with a friend.
Because just like Pip reminds us:
Even small actions can make a big difference.
Tiny Hero Moments
Latest Episodes
Join the Faithfully Explore! Family
Get new episodes delivered right to your inbox:
Share your child’s Belief Backpack art or favorite lesson on Instagram and tag Faithfully Explore!
Help me create more engaging content:








Let us know what you think.