The Most Powerful Tool at a Writer's Command
So what tool am I talking about? The power of three. Three is a mystical number that shows up repeatedly in mythology: three fates, three muses, three graces. Three is a prime component of fairy tales: three wishes, three little pigs, three bears. Three creates a series, a pattern of cause and effect. There are three stages of truth: first a concept is rejected, second it is violently opposed, third it is accepted as self-evident. Three is a basic structure of life: carbohydrates, protein, fat; electron, proton, neutron; past, present, future. And it is a basic structure of stories: beginning, middle, end.
The power of three is so pervasive that you can use it to plan a functional wardrobe. Before buying an article of clothing, think of three things to wear with it, three places to wear it, and three ways to accessorize it.
Three is a symmetrical number that satisfies something deep within our psyches, and if we use it in our writing, we can find a way into our reader's minds, hearts, and souls.
To use the power of three in articles: Set up your premise, prove it, conclude it.
To use the power of three in a mystery: Give one clue to tantalize; two to suggest a direction of discovery; three to create a pattern.
To use the power of three in a story: Create tension, develop it, release it.
To use the power of three in description: Mention three attributes.
To use the power of three in devising a plot, following the storyline of The Three Bears. The first time Goldilocks tries to reach her goal, she fails but learns the risks. The second time she tries, she confirms that she's doing things wrong, but she learns from her mistakes. The third time she tries, she gets it right.
To use the power of three in giving a speech: First, tell the audience what you're going to tell them. Second, tell them. Third, tell them what you told them.
Because my work in progress has evolved into a story of a mythic journey, I have been paying particular attention to three. Instead of one mentor, my hero will have three, each of whom gives him a gift. He will meet three women; the third will be "the one." He will have three chances to cross the threshold into a safe place. The story will be divided into three parts, like a play, and the hero will have three opportunities to accomplish a goal in each part.
Perhaps the power of three is formulaic, but life is a formula, and the power of three seems to work for it. So, when in doubt, I'll think three.
Related Lenses
- The Meaning of Color
- What colors we like tell us who we are.
- Creating a Character
- Throw your characters into the plot and see what they do, what they say, and what they think.
- Describing a Scene in an Interesting Way
- Make the setting an active participant in your story.
- "Must Have" Books About Writing Fiction
- Important additions to any writer's reference library.
- Three On a Match
- Why it's unlucky to light three cigarettes on a match. Or is it?
Bertram's Books
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In quarantined Colorado, where hundreds of thousands of people are dying from an unstoppable disease called the red death, insomniac Kate Cummings struggles to find the courage to live and to love. Her new love, investigative reporter Greg Pullman, is determined to discover who unleashed the deadly organism and why they did it, until the cost - Kate's life - becomes more than he can pay.
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