The contents of this article are based on an issue of Simpsons Comics or another comic series and is considered to be non-canon and therefore may have not actually happened/existed.
I Shrink, Therefore I'm Small is a comic story in Simpsons Comics 8.
Plot[]
It starts when Smithers and Mr. Burns are in Burns office and Burns get chest pains. Smithers calls the doctor and the doctor says Mr Burns suffers from a severe case of indigestion. Burns then relays the story that it had to do with the 1929 stock market crash when he let out a massive belch that distracted the stock market workers and then the crash happens.
Lisa sits in a school bus next to Martin and they are talking about Lisa´s mouse that she has in a cage in her lap who was taught to do tai chi. Bart takes the mouse out of the cage and decides to scare Sherri and Terri with it and it runs out a window into the Power Plant. Lisa demands Bart find it and he is all too happy to do so at the risk or losing a school day and recruits Milhouse. In the powerplant Homer is on the way to help Mr. Burns. They put Homer in a machine to make him very small. When they are putting the laser on the machine to make Homer small, Bart and Milhouse run close to the machine so they also become small. The small Homer goes into Mr. Burns mouth and down to the stomach to help him. During the time Homer is down in Mr. Burns stomach, Bart and Milhouse see a candybar. Smithers puts the candybar into Mr. Burns mouth without understanding that Bart and Milhouse are on it. Down in the stomach, Homer sees Bart and Milhouse and picks them up. When Homer is on his way to pick them up he destroys the candybar in Burns stomach so he doesn't have to have pains anymore. They all go up again trough Burns' mouth and become big again. Then Mr Burns releases all his pent up gas in a super belch that makes Barney think he saw his father. When Bart comes up from Burns' stomach, he sees Lisa's mouse and he catches the mouse and goes home.
In the last page of the comic, Bart and Homer sit in front of the TV. Marge asks them how their day has been and Homer answers - "The usual".