Alric |
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So I have a 4 year old nephew, and a few days before Christmas he counted up all the gifts under his Christmas tree, and then Christmas morning comes and he is crying because Santa Claus didn't leave him any gifts! He got extra gifts but his mother put them all under the tree(it wasn't labeled or anything so easy to say it was from Santa) without thinking he would notice. Now they came up a solution for their problem, and they had a couple of extra gifts which they pulled out and said Santa had left them at the front door. Problem solved, right? |
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Alric |
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I think the american obsession *because im not sure if its true elsewhere?* of telling kids that santa is real is seriously disturbing. I did not grow up believing in santa. Being the youngest, my parents 'gave up' trying to get me to believe in santa. It wouldn't have worked because my older sisters would have just teased about believing in santa anyways. |
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Totally agree with you Alric. |
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I've also never believed in santa as far as I remember, and I also think to better not tell that lie. |
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To counter the reality gone astray with anger, hatred, and disdain.. |
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Signature work courtesy of Cloud
I definitively agree Alric - it is not fair to make fools of your children - also - he sure is in a kindergarten, where other children will mock him for believing it. |
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You only give gifts because of the gratitude you get back? Wow, no wonder you don't understand Christmas. |
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Seriously Xei? You want to be personal about this? You have a problem with me, then I have a problem with you. Continue posting in this manner and I will report you for harassment. Im not even the person who created this thread. |
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Nobody's "harassing you" muffin. |
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Family was Jewish. I remember in pre-school I got in trouble for telling some kids there was no Santa something like that. It may have been the Easter bunny or even Jesus. Something like that. I guess the school told my mom and she had a talk with me about not telling the Christian kids we don't believe in that stuff. There wasn't really a point in telling that story, this thread just reminded me of it. |
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I think i agree most with Juroara here. Solid points. |
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I grew up believing in Santa Claus and I am happy I did. I loved every minute of all my gullible beliefs and I would not want to lose them. Kids slowly discover that Santa Claus does not exist and I know no one that ever got mad at their parents or felt any negative emotion discovering that their parents had lied to them about Santa Claus. Instead, kids feel like they have outsmarted their parents and their peers when they discover the truth and they sometimes see if they can make their parents believe that they still believe in Santa Claus. It's Christmas. It's a game. Everyone gets it. Everyone likes it. No one sees it as a lie except for adults who think too much about it. |
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I ♥ your avatar OccipitalRed (panda) |
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Thank you Havago! |
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I don't like the tradition very much myself, your concern is comforting. Along with religious beliefs, I'd like the see all supernatural beliefs die out eventually. I think telling kids about things like Santa Clause and the Easter Bunny just delays and maybe even diminishes appreciation for an authentic scientific approach to reality. I don't think any time should be wasted before trying to stoke that. It also seems disrespectful to their god-given intellect to treat them like a lesser species that can be lied to in artificially cheerful ways. If I ever had kids, I would probably just replace Santa by emphasizing the importance and joys of relationships, empathy, and charity. Maybe I would even say it's the birthday of a philosopher who taught those things. I have a lot of nostalgia for Christmas and it has a place in my heart, so I don't think I would change it completely. I would at least start with not lying to them about supernatural phenomena. The tree thing kind of bothers me as well, but that's a different story. Basically, I think for children's minds to be optimally honed parents should treat them like humans with the ability to reason and embellish the opportunity to do so in this beautiful and wonderful existence. I have nothing against imagination, some Christmas stories with Santa in them are great. I just think trying to embellish reality with supernatural beliefs is unnecessary and possibly counterproductive. |
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See, I also think the world would be a better place without religion. Why? Because religions aren't actually religions, they're really just a set of traditions that people put so much importance in as to consider other people who do not have the same traditions inferior. |
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I agree with this, but there's a difference between myths and beliefs. It just doesn't seem to me like there's any need to add an excess of "magic" to a kid's perspective of reality. By your definition of it, a relatively honest perspective holds more than enough magic to keep them entertained for a lifetime. Also, a man who gives everyone gifts in one night out of the kindness of his heart while keeping everyone in scientific ignorance about how that's possible seems kind of contradictory to me. lol |
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Last edited by Wayfaerer; 12-29-2013 at 03:35 PM.
Yes. You are right. |
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I actually retained my belief in Santa's existence until middle school, at which point I became apathetic toward the subject. I got presents; I didn't care whom they were from. |
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As a child I was more disturbed by the ending of The Hunchback of Notre Dame than the realization that Santa was fictional. |
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"you will not transform this house of prayer into a house of thieves"
In today's world a little magic may be a decent distraction for children. It's not a bad thing. By the time they figure it out they start seeing the world the way it actually is. Reality sucks! And most of us probably look back with mostly positive memories about the whole Santa situation anyway. No harm done. Let's move on to more important issues. |
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Fairies are magical. Dragons are magical. But even in middle school I thought santa was lame :b |
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I almost didn't believe in kids who believe in Santa, I thought that was just a movie thing. Guess it's an America thing. |
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I am extremely glad I believed in Santa Claus until I was 8. It was a beautiful belief, and it made Christmas time have a magical quality that helped create some of my best childhood memories. I thank my parents for telling me Santa Claus was real. I am glad they ended up coming clean, but it was a harmless and beautiful white lie they told me temporarily. I have no regrets over it. Scientific realism and skepticism are for teens and adults. |
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You are dreaming right now.
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