[blparent] Santa

Veronica Smith madison_tewe at spinn.net
Tue Nov 15 16:57:08 UTC 2011


I didn't mean they shouldn't encourage their kids to believe, what I meant
is they should say things like, Santa will come but remember you are not the
only child on the block, so if he brings you something small, then you shall
be grateful.  This is always what we told Gab.  She wanted Santa to bring
her a friend for our dog and we told her he does not deliver live pets to
those who already have one or to peeps whose parents cannot afford another
mouth to feed.
I also have told her that he does bring what he can, but sometimes he just
gets overwhelmed.  She has always been okay with this.
The same with the toothfairy, in some houses that fairy brings lots of
money, but in this house, smaller amounts and she's never questioned the
differences.  
A parent shouldn't encourage a child to ask for bigger and better than
anyone else if they cannot play the game.  Smile! How are you feeling these
days?  When is your baby due? 


-----Original Message-----
From: blparent-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blparent-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of jan wright
Sent: Monday, November 14, 2011 7:20 AM
To: blparent
Subject: [blparent] Santa

Hi V,

i understand the concept of Santa and do think that "Giving" is a good
idea. in fact, i think that one of our traditions will be buying a
gift for someone else (even outside the family) and 'giving it' it --
maybe even annonymously.
you wrote:
"A parent shouldn't play the game if they can't or won't fulfill their
child's wishes."
It is not just the parent, but the entire society. and, so you are
saying that if a parent can't (in some way) fulfill a child's wishes,
then they shouldn't give the child hope. But, it is not nearly that
simple. Do those who are unemployed just tell their child that Santa
can't make it this year? How do you explain why Jenny got everything
that was on her list and Jessica (whose list might have been quite a
bit smaller in comparison) did not get anything that was on hers?

i understand this point, but we don't live in a vacuum. Personally,
while I might indulge my child a bit, I still think that if we are not
careful, we can give children the wrong message about Santa, gift
giving and receiving. I would never bust another child's bubble about
Santa and when my children did know who Santa was, I would encourage
them to permit the others to believe as long as they could. It is the
parents' responsibility to teach them about Santa.
And, i am not saying that Santa is wrong or bad. Truth be told, when
the children are old enough to understand, we enjoy playing a bit of
"Santa" ourselves.
i am just saying that i have seen lots of parents go into debt playing
Santa and i have seen lots of ungreatful spoiled children, who,
(Because they think that Santa has an endless supply of toys), believe
that their behavior directly corelates with the gifts that they
receive.

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