Let me ask you something. When was the last time you read a fairy tale?
Not to a grandchild. Not as a favour. For yourself.
If you are like most seniors, it has been decades. We put away fairy
tales somewhere around the time we put away dollhouses and toy trucks. We decided
they were for children. We decided we had outgrown them.
But here is what I have learned after nearly eighty years. We did
not outgrow fairy tales. We just forgot why we needed them.
Fairy tales were not invented to entertain children at bedtime. They
were told and handed down from generation to generation because they contained lessons
that people needed to learn to survive in an increasingly hostile world.
Think about it.
Little Red Riding Hood taught children
not to trust smooth-talking strangers.
Hansel and Gretel taught them that even seemingly kind people could have
dangerous intentions.
The Three Little Pigs taught that doing things right the first time, brick,
not straw, could save your life.
These were not gentle stories. In their original forms, they were
terrifying. And they were supposed to be. Because the world was terrifying, and
children needed to know how to navigate it.
We are adults now. We think we do not need such warnings. But the
world is still hostile. The strangers are still smooth-talking. The wolves are still
at the door. And we, perhaps, have forgotten how to recognize them.
There is a famous story about Albert Einstein. A mother asked him
how to make her son more intelligent. She expected him to say something about mathematics
or physics.
Instead, he said, "Read him fairy tales. If you want him to
be very intelligent, read him more fairy tales."
Einstein understood something that we have forgotten. Fairy tales
are not the opposite of science. They are its companion. Alongside physics and poetry,
they are our best instruments for discerning the rules of reality and building from
them models of what is possible.
Physics tells you how the world works. Fairy tales tell you how to
live in it.
The Italian writer Cristina Campo wrote something that has stayed
with me. She said that hope and trust are different things, and confusing them can
be dangerous.
Hope is counting on a lucky break. Hope is thinking that this time,
things will work out because you deserve them to. Hope is fragile. It depends on
particular events going your way.
Trust is different. Trust does not count on particular events. Trust
is sure that there is a larger pattern, a deeper economy, which encompasses everything
that happens, the good and the bad, and surpasses their meaning the way a tapestry
surpasses the individual threads that compose it.
The hero of a fairy tale does not hope. The hero trusts. They trust
that if they follow the path, if they pay attention, if they are kind to the strange
old woman who asks for help, something will come of it. They do not know what. They
do not know when. But they trust.
That is what we have lost. Not hope. Trust.
Here is the thing about fairy tales that we forget as adults. The
hero is always asked to do the impossible.
Find the golden thread in the dark forest.
Answer the riddle before the sun rises.
Awaken the sleeping princess with nothing but a kiss.
And here is the secret. The hero succeeds not by being stronger,
smarter, or luckier. The hero succeeds by forgetting their limits when contending
with the impossible, and paying constant attention to those same limits when performing
it.
That is not a contradiction. That is wisdom.
When you are facing the impossible, a diagnosis, a loss, a change
you never wanted, you must forget your limits. You must act as if you are capable
of more than you think you are.
But you must also pay attention to your limits. You must rest when
you are tired. You must ask for help when you need it. You must know that the impossible
is achieved one small step at a time.
Fairy tales teach this. We forgot.
Here is something that sounds strange, but I believe is true. Adversity,
challenges, and bumps in the road are often the first signs that a great healing
has begun.
Think about a fever. It is uncomfortable. It is scary. But it is
also the body's way of burning out an infection. The discomfort is not the problem.
It is the solution.
The same is true for the hard things in life. The job loss that forces
you to finally pursue what you love. The illness that teaches you to slow down.
The death that reminds you to cherish the people who are still here.
Fairy tales understand this. The hero does not defeat the dragon
and then live happily ever after without scars. The hero defeats the dragon and
is changed. Wiser. Kinder. More capable of seeing what matters.
We want the victory without the transformation. Fairy tales know
that is not possible.
Here is a final thought to carry with you.
Everything you treasure exists not because it had to. Not because
it was likely or necessary. But because the universe took a gamble against staggering
odds.
You are here. Against all odds, you are here.
The love you have known. The children you raised. The friends who
have stayed. The sunrises you have watched. The meals you have shared. None of it
was guaranteed. All of it was improbable.
And yet here it is. Here you are.
Fairy tales remind us of this. They remind us that possibility always
exceeds probability. That the wildest reaches of the possible are not found in spreadsheets
or statistics but in stories. Stories about girls who sleep for a hundred years
and wake to love. About boys who trade a cow for magic beans and find a giant's
treasure. About ordinary people who, when faced with the impossible, find within
themselves the trust to walk forward anyway.
This week, read a fairy tale. Not to a grandchild. To yourself.
Read The Snow Queen. Read The Twelve Dancing Princesses.
Read the story of Baba Yaga or Vasilisa the Wise. Read something that
reminds you that the world is stranger and more possible than the news would have
you believe.
And when you finish, ask yourself: What impossible thing am I
being asked to trust right now?
You may not have an answer. That is fine. The hero never knows at
the beginning either.
But the path is there. The thread is there. And you, like every hero
before you, have everything you need to find it.
Once upon a time are not just words for children.
They are the oldest, wisest, most hopeful words we have.
And we need them now more than ever.