>>111768667She grows up, never being anything more than that weird, disabled mentally retarded girl to anyone new she meets. And to everyone she knew before her "change," she'd just be that girl who was once smart, funny, and pretty, but now is little more than a living reminder of what used to be, of what COULD have been had Old-Wendy's life not been cut so short.
New-Wendy doesn't care, though. She eventually finds happiness, in the simple things, like staring aimlessly into the distance, slobbering all over people, trying to lick her stumps (they are too short for her to succeed), making funny sounds, rolling around on the floor, or wetting herself at the most inconvenient times - she thinks its funny when someone gets upset at her for peeing all over the place. Even as an adult, she acts this way, and eventually has to be put into a care home after her parents can't bear to look at the retard that was once their bright, beautiful daughter anymore.
For a while, she was really sad about Stan and all her friends, but a second lobotomy in fifth grade, that removed what was left of her frontal lobe, fixed that for her. Now she doesn't know what she ever saw in Stan, or her former girl friends - they're not nearly as fun as she is, anyway, and what's more important to New-Wendy than having fun? Nothing.