Math Facts That'll Make You Say "Wait, What?" #10
Counting to a Million Would Ruin Your Month, Two Is the Coolest Even Number, and Forty Is Alphabetically Perfect
Math is weird in the best possible way. It's full of surprises that have nothing to do with tests or worksheets.
Here are some facts to share with your kid. Not because they're educational (though they are), but because they're genuinely cool. The kind of cool that makes you look at numbers differently.
Counting to a Million Would Ruin Your Month
If you started counting out loud, one number per second, and never stopped for sleep, food, water, or any reason at all, it would take roughly 23 days to reach one million. That's not a typo. Twenty-three days of continuous counting.
A billion? Thirty-one years. Not days. Years.
This is why most people struggle to grasp the difference between a million and a billion. They sound similar. They look similar on a page. They are not remotely similar. A million seconds is about eleven and a half days. A billion seconds is nearly thirty-two years. The gap between them is the gap between a long weekend and an entire adult life.
Numbers at this scale stop being quantities and start being durations. And durations are something kids understand in their bones, because five minutes waiting for dinner feels very different from five minutes on a trampoline.
Next time someone says "a billion," ask them how long a billion seconds is. Watch their face when they do the maths.
Two Is the Coolest Even Number (And There's a Reason)
A prime number is a number that can only be divided evenly by 1 and itself. So 3 is prime, 5 is prime, 7 is prime, 11 is prime.
And 2 is prime. Which makes it the only even prime number in existence.
Every other even number can be divided by 2, which immediately disqualifies it from being prime. Four is 2 × 2. Six is 2 × 3. Eight is 2 × 4. None of them qualify. But 2 divides evenly only by 1 and itself, so it sneaks through. It's the exception. The rebel. The only even number invited to the prime number club, and it has been there since the beginning of mathematics.
Mathematicians call it "the oddest prime," which is a pun and they know it.
Forty Is Alphabetically Perfect
The number 40, spelled out as F-O-R-T-Y, is the only number in English whose letters appear in alphabetical order.
F comes before O. O comes before R. R comes before T. T comes before Y. Perfect sequence.
Meanwhile, "one" is spelled in reverse alphabetical order: O-N-E. O comes after N, and N comes after E. Someone noticed this and presumably felt very satisfied about it for the rest of the day.
Every other number in English is alphabetical chaos. Thirty-seven? A mess. Eighty-two? No chance. Forty stands alone, perfectly ordered, unbothered.
It's a small thing. But small things in mathematics tend to stay with people longer than big ones, because they're the kind of fact you can test immediately and then tell someone else before lunch.
The facts that get kids interested in maths aren't usually the useful ones. They're the strange ones. The ones that sound wrong until you check. The ones that make you grab a piece of paper or a calculator and test it yourself.
Usefulness comes later. Curiosity has to come first.