Three —T.K. Thorne
Three is a magic number.
Can you hear your mother counting down the time left until unnamed but dreadful forces will compel you to do what you haven’t done yet? Your personality might have made you immediately hop to at “1.” Or (like me) you might have waited until the last possible moment before her lips formed that dreaded last number—
—Which was, and will remain for all time, the number three. “1 . . . 2 . . . 3!”
Never has a mother anywhere given four seconds or five.
Similarly, everyone engaged in moving something heavy, hoists together, not on “1” or “2,” but “3.” Without argument or consultation, “heave” happens on “3.”
Goldilocks is confronted by the three bears with their three bowls of porridge at varying temperatures. Only with the third does she find the perfect one.
The very bad wolf huffs and puffs and blows down two of the pigs’ homes before being foiled by the solid brick structure of #3.
The prince makes two failed tries up the ice mountain before rescuing the princess on #3.
Two of Cinderella’s sisters fail at getting their hefty feet into the glass slipper, but on attempt #3, Cindy slips it gracefully on.
Three is a triangle with three points and three sides. The formula for a right triangle is the basis for the pyramids of Egypt.
For Pythagoras, famous ancient mathematician, the number three was the key to all the hidden mysteries of the universe.
Isaac Newton: The Three Laws of Motion
Isaac Asimov: The (original) Three Laws of Robotics
No artist would be happy with two elements in a grouping.
The Oxford comma rule requires commas when the grouping reaches three items. (See next sentence.)
Three is:
- the family—mother, father, and child;
- the Three Wise Men who visited the infant Jesus (with their three gifts);
- the Holy Trinity—Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; and
- the three primary gods of Hindu mythology—Brahma, the creator, Vishnu, the keeper of reality, and Shiva, the destroyer.
The multiples of 3 come up 3 times in each set of 10 (3,6,9, etc.) And 3 x 6 (another multiple of 3) is 18, a special number in Judaism.
All of life depends on three types of molecules—DNA, RNA, and proteins. The structure of DNA is made of three combinations of molecules.
All this “three” stuff began when I randomly noticed there are three beautiful shells in my home that are special treasures.
One, from a dear friend, lives in my newly created little pond, nestled among stones and an old water pump.
One was a spontaneous gift from a Bahamian woman I met years ago in her little island home, who told how she had almost drowned at the age of 84 and had to swim two miles in the strong currents to survive.
The third shell is the one that sat on the glass top of my grandmother’s porch coffee table for most of my early years of life. I never failed to lift it to my ear when I visited Granny, listening with wonder to the mystery of the whistling wormhole to the sea.
So, that led to the ruminations on the magic number three, which is imprinted into us, perhaps in our cells, and which every writer worth her salt knows is important in telling a satisfying story.
T.K. Thorne writes books that take her wherever her imagination flies. TKThorne.com
T.K., numerology is a fascinating subject. While I’ve never considered the permutations of 3, I confess I’m partial to 7 and 18. Interesting post!
Let’s not forget the love triangle, three-act plays, the beginning-middle-end threesome of writing! Thanks for this thoughtful post, T.K.!
Of course, sometimes a threesome can be one too many …. Still an interesting post.
Fascinating read!
Brilliant, TK. I confess I was guilty of counting to three. Probably because back in the day of corporate punishment I saw a friend of mine count to three with her children, then pull out a spoon. Her children always hopped to when they saw that spoon. So, I, who never laid a hand on my children, decided to try it. “I’m going to count to three,” I said. Then pulled out a spoon. My son and daughter merely laughed, then did what I asked anyway. All in all though, I’d say three is a very important number. 🙂 Great blog!
This is so much fun. Fascinating!!
I love this blog! In a writing conference where one of the presenters was a stand up comedian (for real!) I learned that groups of three are important in writing good comedy. Two doesn’t get the coveted laugh and four gets eye rolls. Three however, carries the show. Great post!