Tok Shoes
Today, I got my Rahkshi shoes containing two TOK (trans-orange kraata) from Ebay. The shoes don't fit me, but that's not why I got them. Yes, I got them for the kraata.
This will be a great start to my kraata colection. I'll show some pictures, but you can click this sentence to see all the TOK pictures from Brickshelf (when public).

Wow. Big picture. Sorry. It doesn't stretch the screen, though. Anyway, I've been waiting about two weeks for these to come, and now they're here. I have a loonng driveway, so my brother and I walked our dogs down to the end where our mailbox is to check if it came. While going down the driveway, we saw the mailtruck pass the road we live on, passing our mailbox. We waited for at least ten minutes until we saw it come back. Without putting any mail in the mail box, the driver turned into our driveway and we knew what he was delivering.

Filled with excitement, I began to rush up the driveway. "John!" my brother called. "Let's wait for him to come back down with the mail!" Always something preventing my excitement. I waited. As soon as the driver returned with our mail, which I quickly grabbed, I hurried back home, tore away the tape on the package, and stared in awe. This is what I saw:

There they were, the TOK in a pair of shoes that don't fit me. I had some trouble getting it out, though.
"You're probably not supposed to get it out," my mom said. When I informed her that other people had TOK in their kraata collections separate from these shoes, she replied, "They probably tore the shoes up to get them out, and we're not going to do that because we can sell them on EBay again in a year. Now do your math." I knew this was not true. I followed orders, pausing the DVD that teaches me my math frequently, trying to figure out how to get them out. You see, I'm homeschooled. So I learn math off of a DVD.
Finally, I pried open the part of the shoe guarding the TOK. There was an orange flap you had to pull, revealing the kraata, as shown below:

Awesome. With haste, I removed the kraata and held them as I finished my math. I'd done it.
That was an experience I'd never forget.

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