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This paper examines the ways in which children’s bodies and objects in an early childhood classroom intra-act, creating new modes of existence for the human and nonhuman. The ethnographic study in which this paper is situated evolved over the course of eight months in a second grade public school classroom in the southeastern United States. Drawing on Deleuzoguattarian philosophies, I analyze the ways in which three boys’ intra-actions with the World Wresting Enterprise (WWE) created new opportunities for them to be[come] in school. I consider implications for turning a gaze toward the relationship between the human and nonhuman as a means to move past familiar and often marginalizing representations of young children and to recognize the plurality of early childhood.