Christmas
is a dream come true for children. It
builds up with advent calendars and decorations around the house. The smell of fresh Hershey kiss cookies and
the visiting relatives fills the heart and the belly. Lets not forget the presents. For parents Christmas time is the exact
opposite, it’s a time when you stress for making plans, organizing the house,
purchasing gifts of equal or lesser value to those you will receive and trying
to keep up with the Jones’ children’s gifts.
It’s exhausting.
One thing
that parents take solace in is the wonder and awe surrounding Santa Claus. When children are young, there’s no conflict. You take your kids to the mall, they sit on
the big man’s lap and tell him what you want.
I love when he says he’ll see what he can do after looking at your
face. Inevitably your child comes
home and asks the question, “Is Santa Claus real?” It’s so cute and innocent. Everyone knows that
lying to your children is wrong but there’s several things that go through your
mind. You want your children to be happy
and innocent for as long as possible. I
think more importantly you don’t want your child to go around telling other children
that Santa is not real. You picture the
sad crying faces of the other kids and the hawkish faces of the parents with exaggerated disappointment.
During
kindergarten keeping the tale going is pretty easy. Children are only at the why stage. Why does Santa give out presents? Why does he use a sleigh? Why do the elves work for free? Why does he have to live in the North
pole? By first grade, children are introduced
to the frustrating skill of deductive reasoning. The questions become exponentially more
difficult to navigate. If Santa is so
big how does he fit down a small chimney?
By second grade the gig is up because your answers sound more and more
contrived. What you don’t expect is the
deluge of follow-up questions after you spill the beans.
(1)
Is the tooth fairy real?
(2)
Is the Easter bunny real?
(3)
Is Jesus real?
/ Did Moses really part the red sea?
That last one hurts.
How do you explain to a child that you actively lied about something you
knew not to be true and then expect them to believe you about something that
involves faith? There must be a better
way. I also thought it was ironic that
he knows when you are sleeping and when you’re awake, he knows if you’ve been
bad or good too. Isn’t that God?
Here’s
what I did. When they were young I took
them to see Santa and take a picture.
When my oldest son asked me if Santa was real, I didn’t say yes or no. I said Santa is make believe, it’s pretend
for fun. It’s like when you play outside
and think you are really a super hero.
You don’t jump off the roof because you’ll get hurt but pretending it’s
real doesn’t harm anyone. I then said
the best part of make believe is letting everyone else pretend it’s real at the
same time. That solves both problems, it
lets my children enjoy the fun. They
still get presents and have fun and can take pictures with the big man and
still believe that I am a parent of my word.
I still
made them an adorable online video using portable north pole with Santa saying their
name and showing their pictures in book.
He then would give them some advice and show them a picture of the toy
that they really wanted. It's all in good fun!
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