“…Hope is interpreted as an essential component to living a peaceful and happy life, and the contentment at the end of a fairy tale can help stimulate the faith that all difficulties in life are possible to withstand and still to survive [32]. Although one may observe that fairy tales have a relatively simple literary structure, it comes in contradiction with their possibility to point out complex evolutive, social and individual dynamics, tending to be able to both accommodate and mirror our projections and perceptions [33]. Therefore, the characters were designed in a way that could help the participants think of fairy tales: the characters represented by the protagonists were the virtuous ones fighting in the name of good, and the teacher, the antagonist, portrayed the evil through all her actions, dialogue, and by her way of acting.…”