A story can end with someone being sad or happy, and that changes how we feel about it.
Imagine you have a favorite toy, let's say it’s a red ball. If your friend plays nicely with you and shares the ball, you both laugh and run around, that’s like a happy ending. You feel good because everything went well.
But if your friend takes the ball without asking and runs away, making you cry, that’s like an unhappy ending. You feel bad because something didn’t go as you hoped.
Sometimes, stories have sad endings to help us understand what happens when things don’t go right. It's like when you lose a game, it feels bad at first, but maybe you’ll try harder next time.
Other times, stories have happy endings so we feel excited and proud, just like when you win the game and get extra cookies for dessert!
So whether a story ends with joy or sadness, it helps us learn something new about life, just like playing with your favorite toy teaches you about sharing and fun.
Examples
- A fairy tale where the prince and princess live happily ever after
- A movie where the hero loses the battle but wins the war
- A book that ends with everyone being sad and alone
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See also
- How Does Climactic Moments in Storytelling (and Why They Matter) Work?
- How Does The Ancient Blueprint For All Storytelling Work?
- How Does Plot vs Story | Know The Difference (Fiction Writing Advice) Work?
- Does The Weather Actually Affect Your Mood?
- How Does The Amygdala in 5 Minutes | Big Think Work?