Why Once Upon a Time is the Perfect Time to Start a Story

Black and white image of very large clock with Roman numbers, used for the article Why Once Upon a Time is the Perfect Time to Start a Story, by Jan Nichols.

I’ve been rolling around the words once upon a time inside my mind. Why is this the way so many fairy tales and children’s stories begin?

Image of a black and white abstract painting of a castle, used for the article Why Once Upon a Time is the Perfect Time to Start a Story, by Jan Nichols.

The power of this beginning is in its ambiguity. It’s an invitation to experience a time and place outside and beyond the familiar routines that shape our lives.

The Power of This 4-Word Preamble

The power of this 4-word preamble is in its ambiguous and open-ended framework. Let’s look at that.

Image of a snowy, misty forest with a tiny building that has an arched doorway, used for the article Why Once Upon a Time is the Perfect Time to Start a Story, by Jan Nichols.

Once implies a singular event. This story is unique, unlike any other, because it happened only one time.


Image of an hour glass against a black background, use for the article Why Once Upon a Time is the Perfect Time to Start a Story, by Jan Nichols.

Upon. This particular story sits on top of time. It happened in an expansive period of any-time. I find this eloquent in its economy. The story we are about to hear is beyond time. It exists apart from time. It’s timeless and yet universal. That’s a lot for a single word to accomplish. But upon is more than up to the task.

Black and white image of multiple, blurry watch faces, used for the article Why Once Upon a Time is the Perfect Time to Start a Story, by Jan Nichols.

A time. These two words add insight to the expansive description of upon. That’s because the story, in addition to happening in some-when of time, also took place in a particular time. This grounds the story in a particular circumstance without imposing the sense of a specific time. It is delicious in its ambiguity.

Black an white image of woman's hand hovering over an open book with a cup of coffee beside it, used for the article Why Once Upon a Time is the Perfect Time to Start a Story, by Jan NIchols

I’ve been thinking about how to approach a ‘once upon a time’ set-up for business writing. An introduction that has the same kind of ambiguous yet intriguing statement. One that pulls the reader into a space that invites their attention.

I’m still noodling on it. But I know that thinking about a ‘once upon a time’ setup will inform and influence how I write. I hope it does the same for you.

Previous
Previous

How Life Informs My Fiction Writing

Next
Next

3 Reasons Why the B2B Funnel is the Wrong Marketing Metaphor