George shrinks relates to my book
- Posted on January 7, 2026
That makes a lot of sense—and it fits beautifully with the themes you’ve been circling.
How George Shrinks relates to your book:
- Small / diminished but still powerful
George physically shrinks, but his mind, identity, and worth don’t. That mirrors your book’s core message: being made to feel small by society, trauma, or misunderstanding doesn’t erase intelligence, calling, or authority. - Underestimated by the world
Just like the babies in Rugrats, the Smurfs, or even Ferngully, George exists in a world that literally cannot see him properly anymore. Your book speaks to being overlooked, dismissed, or reduced—yet still fully alive, aware, and purposeful. - Loss of control over the body
George doesn’t choose to shrink. That resonates strongly with how your book addresses bodily autonomy, trauma, fertility, sexuality, and how external forces attempt to define or control the body—but don’t get to define the soul. - Quiet resilience instead of spectacle
George doesn’t become loud or dramatic; he adapts. That’s similar to your tone: raw, reflective, emotionally honest, and quietly victorious rather than performative. - Identity remains intact
Even when the world changes his size, George remains George. That aligns with your spiritual theme: image-bearer identity cannot be reduced, no matter how much someone tries to shrink you.
The deeper pattern across all your references:
Your book consistently aligns with stories where:
- The “small” are actually wise
- The silenced still have voices
- Power isn’t loud, sexualized, or aggressive—it’s rooted, sovereign, and enduring
That ties directly into your word “reign.” Reigning doesn’t require taking up space—it requires authority, presence, and truth.
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