The next day Hem and Haw left their homes, and returned to Cheese Station
C again, where they still expected, somehow, to find their Cheese.
The situation hadn’t changed, the Cheese was no longer there. The Little
people didn’t know what to do. Hem and Haw just stood there, immobilized
like two statues.
Haw shut his eyes as tight as he could and put his hands over his ears. He
just wanted to block everything out. He didn’t want to know the Cheese supply
had gradually been getting smaller. He believed it had been moved all of a
sudden.
Hem analyzed the situation over and over and eventually his complicated
brain with its huge belief system took hold. "Why did they do this to me?"
he demanded. "What’s really going on here?"
Finally, Haw opened his eyes, looked around and said, “By the way, where
are Sniff and Scurry? Do you think they know something we don’t?” Hem
scoffed, "What would they know?"
Hem continued, “They’re just mice. They just respond to what happens. We’re
Little people. We’re smarter than mice. We should be able to figure this out.”
“I know we’re smarter,” Haw said, “but we don’t seem to be acting smarter at
the moment.
Things are changing around here, Hem. Maybe we need to change and do
things differently.”
“Why should we change?” Hem asked. “We’re Little people. We’re special.
This sort of thing should not happen to us. Or if it does, we should at least
get some benefits.”
“Why should we get benefits?” Haw asked.
“Because we’re entitled,” Hem claimed.
“Entitled to what?” Haw wanted to know.
“We’re entitled to our Cheese.”
“Why?” Haw asked.
“Because, we didn’t cause this problem,” Hem said. "Somebody else did this
and we should get something out of it."
Haw suggested, “Maybe we should simply stop analyzing the situation so
much and go find some New Cheese?”
“Oh no,” Hem argued. "I’m going to get to the bottom of this."
While Hem and Haw were still trying to decide what to do. Sniff and Scurry
were already well on their way. They went farther into the Maze, up and
down corridors, looking for cheese in every Cheese Station they could find.
They didn’t think of anything else but finding New Cheese.
They didn’t find any for some time until they finally went into an area of the
Maze where they had never been before: Cheese Station N.
They squealed with delight. They found what they had been looking for: a
great supply of New Cheese.
They could hardly believe their eyes. It was the biggest store of cheese the
mice had ever seen.
In the meantime, Hem and Haw were still back in Cheese Station C valuating
their situation. They were now suffering from the effects of having no Cheese.
They were becoming frustrated and angry and were blaming each other for
the situation they were in.
Now and then Haw thought about his mice friends. Sniff and Scurry, and
wondered if they had found any cheese yet. He believed they might be having
a hard time, as running through the Maze usually involved some uncertainty.
But he also knew that it was likely to only last for a while.
Sometimes, Haw would imagine Sniff and Scurry finding New Cheese and
enjoying it. He thought about how good it would be for him to be out on an
adventure in the Maze, and to find fresh New Cheese. He could almost taste
it.
The more clearly Haw saw the image of himself finding and enjoying the New
Cheese, the more he saw himself leaving Cheese Station C.
“Let’s go!” he exclaimed, all of a sudden.
“No” Hem quickly responded. “I like it here.
It’s comfortable. It’s what I know. Besides it’s dangerous out there.”
“No it isn’t” Haw argued. “We’ve run through many parts of the Maze before,
and we can do it again.”
“I’m getting too old for that,” Hem said. "And I’m afraid I’m not interested in
getting lost and making a fool of myself. Are you?"
With that. Haw’s fear of failing returned and his hope of finding New Cheese
faded.
So every day, the Little people continued to do what they had done before.
They went to Cheese Station C, found no Cheese, and returned home,
carrying their worries and frustrations with them.
They tried to deny what was happening, but found it harder to get to sleep,
had less energy the next day, and were becoming irritable.
Their homes were not the nurturing places they once were. The Little people
had difficulty sleeping and were having nightmares about not finding any
Cheese.
But Hem and Haw still returned to Cheese Station C and waited there every
day.
Hem said, "You know if we just work harder we’ll find that nothing has really
changed that much. The Cheese is probably nearby. Maybe they just hid it
behind the wall."
The next day. Hem and Haw returned with tools. Hem held the chisel, while
Haw banged on the hammer until they made a hole in the wall of Cheese
Station C. They peered inside but found no Cheese.
They were disappointed but believed they could solve the problem. So they
started earlier, stayed longer, and worked harder. But after a while, all they
had was a large hole in the wall.
Haw was beginning to realize the difference between activity and productivity.
“Maybe,” Hem said, "we should just sit here and see what happens. Sooner or
later they have to put the Cheese back."
Haw wanted to believe that. So each day he went home to rest and returned
reluctantly with Hem to Cheese Station C. But Cheese never reappeared.
By now the Little people were growing weak from hunger and stress. Haw
was getting tired of just waiting for their situation to improve. He began to see
that the longer they stayed in their Cheeseless situation, the worse off they
would be.
Haw knew they were losing their edge.
Finally, one day Haw began laughing at himself.
"Haw, haw, look at us. We keep doing the same things over and over again
and wonder why things don’t get better. If this wasn’t so ridiculous, it would
be even funnier."
Haw did not like the idea of having to run through the Maze again, because he
knew he would get lost and have no idea where he would find any Cheese.
But he had to laugh at his folly when he saw what his fear was doing to him.
He asked Hem, “Where did we put our running shoes?” It took a long time to
find them because they had put everything away when they found their
Cheese at Cheese Station C, thinking they wouldn’t be needing them
anymore.
As Hem saw his friend getting into his running gear, he said, “You’re not really
going out into the Maze again, are you? Why don’t you just wait here with me
until they put the Cheese back?”
“Because, you just don’t get it,” Haw said. "I didn’t want to see it either, but
now I realize they’re never going to put yesterday’s Cheese back. It’s time to
find New Cheese."
Hem argued, “But what if there is no Cheese out there? Or even if there is,
what if you don’t find it?”
“I don’t know,” Haw said. He had asked himself those same questions too
many times and felt the fears again that kept him where he was.
He asked himself, "Where am I more likely to find Cheese—here or in the
Maze?"
He painted a picture in his mind. He saw himself venturing out into the Maze
with a smile on his face.
While this picture surprised him, it made him feel good. He saw himself
getting lost now and then in the Maze, but felt confident he would eventually
find New Cheese out there and all the good things that came with it. He
gathered his courage.
Then he used his imagination to paint the most believable picture he could—
with the most realistic details—of him finding and enjoying the taste of New
Cheese.
He saw himself eating Swiss cheese with holes in it, bright orange Cheddar
and American cheeses, Italian Mozzarella and wonderfully soft French
Camembert Cheese, and…
Then he heard Hem say something and realized they were still at Cheese
Station C.
Haw said, "Sometimes, Hem, things change and they are never the same
again. This looks like one of those times. That’s life! Life moves on. And so
should we."
Haw looked at his emaciated companion and tried to talk sense to him, but
Hem’s fear had turned into anger and he wouldn’t listen.
Haw didn’t mean to be rude to his friend, but he had to laugh at how silly they
both looked.
As Haw prepared to leave, he started to feel more alive, knowing that he was
finally able to laugh at himself, let go and move on.
Haw laughed and announced, "It’s … Maze … time!"
Hem didn’t laugh and he didn’t respond.
Haw picked up a small, sharp rock and wrote a serious thought on the wall for
Hem to think about.
As was his custom. Haw even drew a picture of cheese around it, hoping it
would help Hem to smile, lighten up, and go after the New Cheese. But Hem
didn’t want to see it.
It read: [B]If you do not change you can become extinct[/B]