Do you make your children believe in Santa Claus?

Do you make your children believe in Santa Claus?

Dec 07, 2014


Santa article

It’s the 7th day of December, the 18th birthday of my youngest son. I just realize now that there are no more minors in our family. It’s time to change all those ITF (In Trust For) accounts. We’re happy to have raised all our sons into wonderful adults. We hope that they will continue to live their lives with enthusiasm and purpose.

It’s been 18 years since I gave birth to our youngest. My doctor said I was going to give birth on Christmas eve but I talked to my baby and asked him to come out on the 8th the feast of the Immaculate Conception of Mary. Well, he didn’t only heed his mom, he even came out a day earlier. This Christmas of 1996 was the Christmas I was most prepared for. I was done with my shopping by September. I was never able to do that again. There are always items here and there to get as The Day approaches.

As we all get into the frenzy of Christmas shopping to tick all the items in our respective “Santa’s List,” have you ever pondered upon the tradition of making kids believe in Santa? I wish to share with you an article that I wrote after a chat I had with my Christmas baby a couple of years ago. It’s about the topic of making our children believe in Santa. It came out in PhilStar.com and RaisingPinoyBoys.com. Here it is.

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Do You Make Your Kids Believe in Santa Claus?

A few days ago, my youngest son Anton was lying on our bed chatting with me about Christmas. He said, “When I have my own kids I won’t make them believe that Santa Claus gives them gifts on Christmas.” I asked why and he said, “Well, I want them to know that I’m the one giving them the gifts!”

This made me go back to my childhood memories about Christmas traditions. I did not grow up believing in Santa Claus. Our parents didn’t raise us believing in someone whom we can write our Christmas gift list to, who will be omnipresent on Christmas day giving presents to children around the world who have not been naughty but nice. I remember having some friends who believed in Santa Claus. I didn’t burst their bubble even if I wondered how they could believe such a thing. But I also thought that maybe they just went along with their parents because that gave them an extra gift on Christmas!

Now when it was our turn to start Christmas traditions with our first born, Marvin and I talked about whether we should introduce Santa Claus to Martin or not. He too didn’t grow up believing in Santa Claus. So our natural tendency was to do away with it. And then I read a short article about a kid who found out that it wasn’t Santa Claus giving him the gifts after all. He was so devastated and felt that Ho Ho Ho! was actually a Ho! Ho! Hoax! He took it so negatively that he said, “From now on I will never believe anything until I see it. So maybe even God is not real because I don’t see Him.”

This was an extreme reaction but it made me feel more confident about our decision not to introduce the Santa gift giver tradition. Other stories from friends vary from “He knew all along but he pretended for the sake of his younger siblings.” to “She was so disappointed in us that she cried asking us, “How could you lie to me all these years?’” Like this little girl, it’s the lying part of this whole tradition that bothers me.

Who is Santa Claus anyway? It was a homework of my second son Enrique during his early grades when I was still tutoring him that made me do some research about Santa Claus. Saint Nicholas was a 4th century saint. He was a bishop of Myra, part of the modern day Turkey. He had a reputation for secret gift giving but the one that I distinctly remember is this. There was a poor man who had three daughters. He was so poor that he could not afford to pay dowry for them. During those days this was a great misfortune because chances are your daughters would remain unmarried and since there were no real jobs for women, they may end up as prostitutes. Nicholas decided to help him but because he was very modest about his generosity, he gave the three purses of gold coins anonymously. One purse each year, the night before a daughter comes of age Nicholas threw the purse through a window or an open door. The father wanted to find out who his benefactor was so on the night before his third daughter turns of age, he watched his windows and doors. Learning about this plan, Nicholas decided to drop the third bag down the chimney instead. Earlier that evening the daughter had washed her stockings and hung them over the embers to dry. So Nicholas bag of gold fell into the stocking!

So how did Santa Claus evolve into a jolly fat and bearded man in red suit? In 1931 artist Haddon Sundblom created magazine ads for Coca-Cola inspired by Clement Clark Moore’s poem “The Night Before Christmas.” His Coke ad images became such a big hit that up to now the happy bearded man in red suit has become our universal image of Santa Claus, erasing all the previous portrayals from different cultures such as elf-life Santa, spooky and scary Santa.

This happy image of Santa adds to the magic of children’s Christmas. There were times when I would wonder, “What if we raised our kids believing in Santa?” I’m sure it would have added to the thrill of preparing for Christmas. Reading what my sons would tell this magical character – their Christmas wish list and why they deserve the gifts, their accomplishments during the year would be nice. Then keeping secrets and figuring out how they won’t catch us put the gifts under the tree might be exciting and magical. For sure it’s not only the kids but also the parents who enjoy this make-believe tradition.

I also wondered whether I deprived my kids of that magic – no Santa Claus, no Tooth Fairy. What does believing in magic really do to kids? I know it enhances their creativity. It makes them imagine things out of the ordinary. It makes them believe that they can achieve what they want to achieve. And this is the very dream of each parent for his child – to believe in himself, that he can achieve his biggest dream!

Back to my conversation with my youngest son, “Anton do you think you can achieve your biggest dreams?” He answered, “Yes of course!”

There goes my case. Maybe the books we read together, the fantasy movies we watched and talked about, especially the true-to-life movies depicting how the spirit triumphs over physical limitations provided the magic. And most of all, believing in God who created us all, who sent Jesus to save us is the greatest magical experience we can ever have. So maybe we should all remember the very reason why we’re celebrating Christmas. Let’s remember this greatest magic given to us as the greatest gift and for sure, we will all believe that our dreams can come true!

Merry Christmas to everyone!

 

Attribution: Images from the internet of St. Nicholas wonder worker, Coca-cola and Visual Photos put together by the author