Viral Santa
My goodness, this Santa thing has really caught on.
More from Karen:
Penis Mom |
A Little Neglect Goes a Long Way |
Why your kids make you a better person |
My goodness, this Santa thing has really caught on.
More from Karen:
Penis Mom |
A Little Neglect Goes a Long Way |
Why your kids make you a better person |
We live in a sciency household as well…after listening to his rocket-scientist dad discuss orbital mechanics at the dinner table, my five year-old son came to me one day and explained to me with a Poor Deluded Mom sigh that Santa could not be real, because he'd have to travel about 17,000 miles an hour and he would burn up in the atmosphere. Uhhh, right…don't tell your little sister!
Flash forward 13 years, and he's a freshman neuroscience major. Different magic, still wondrous.
I just sent him the PM entry – he said "Oh, Mom, you and she would get along So Well!"
Thanks for the laughs tonight.
The week before Christmas, my kids (7 & 9) came and asked, point blank, if the Tooth Fairy was real. As I'd always told them they could ask me anything and I would tell them the truth, I fronted up. They moved on to the Easter Bunny, same response…not real. Then the big question…"is Santa real?". I was honest and gave them much the same explanation as you gave yours.
They didn't CARE!! I couldn't believe it. They still want money for teeth and chocolate at Easter but they dont care if Santa no longer delivers. It was awesome.
Thanks Penis Mom! 😉
After my youngest, a ten-year-old girl, found out the truth about Santa, she brought her most recent dental loss to me, holding it out in the palm of her hand, and said, "Once you know the truth about Santa, you pretty much know everything. Just give me the dollar now." I had to laugh, and she got her dollar!
i just discovered you because of the post you wrote about being the penis mom. it is going around fb of course thanks to huffington! anyway, i LOVE what you have to say on the subject of santa. we have the same situation here with me loving the magic of it all and the hubs being less enthusiastic. but he puts on a brave face and dutifully takes the girls to see the big man every year with me. so i can't complain too much. i am really looking forward to reading more of your insights and wisdom (along with editor's notes as well!)
and btw, i definitely would have done the same thing with the pumpkin chunkin' email…;) penis mom, you rock!! (okay, i won't call you that anymore..LOL!)
My grandmother told us, til the day she died at 77- and her kids were 48, 56, and 59- that Santa comes for as long as you believe in him.
Of course we all knew by then that Santa used her credit card and had her handwriting, but that was irrelevant to the tradition… and in fact, the first year that you said Santa wasn't real was usually your last, because he didn't bring you anything.
And that's what we've agreed to tell our little one
We never used "Santa is watching" as a tool for good behavior in our house, but portrayed Santa as someone who loves all people, children and adults, but was disappointed when anyone chose bad behavior over good behavior. We impressed upon our girls that Santa loved making others happy by giving something and not expecting anything in return. We compared that to the Greek word, "agape," which is a selfless and spiritual love. When they asked if Santa was real, we would turn the question around and ask them what they thought and if they had to have any proof except for what was in their hearts to make Santa real. Neither of them looked us in the eye and said to us, "Santa isn't real," like they did when we had the Tooth Fairy discussion or the Easter Bunny discussion. Then when they were a little older we read the Jeff Guinn book "The Autobiography of Santa Claus" and enjoyed the mixture of history and legend Guinn puts to life on the page. We know our 15 and 18 year olds don't still believe he is real, but we know that they came to their own conclusion about Santa as a physical being as opposed to the spirit and intent of Santa Claus. When their young cousins ask them if they still believe in Santa, they say "yes" knowing that what they believe in isn't a person but feeling they have inside their hearts. They know there is a little Santa inside each of us.
ha ha ha.. love it.. I think it's healthy, very healthy Karen
Congrats on getting featured on BlogHer btw!
Punita
I enjoy reading your writings. Merry Christmas to you and yours.
Karen is an outspoken comedian, writer, artist, teacher, speaker, podcaster, Mom of seven children, and an adventurous thinker. She is a strong advocate of mindful thinking, asking for what you want, and living an empowered life. Karen speaks with expertise and humor on gender issues, parenting, homeschooling, autism, co-housing, sex and sexuality, positive self imagery, and being ridiculously happy and super-cool.
Buy Karen's book on Amazon now:© 2024 · Karen Mangiacotti
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