How far do you go in perpetuating the myth of Santa in your family?
There's been a debate recently about this on a local parenting board here, and I found the topic so fascinating.
Responses ranged from, "I'm an adult with kids of my own and I *still* don't acknowledge to my own parents that Santa is real!" to, "We want our kids to be able to trust us no matter what and perpetuating the myth of Santa feels like lying, so we don't believe in Santa in our house."
We don't go overboard in the Santa department here, we just mention here and there about how Santa's coming or Santa will bring the presents, etc. But I don't do a whole lot extra to perpetuate the myth; we don't put out milk and cookies on Christmas Eve (honestly I just forget and the kids never ask), we don't do Elf on the Shelf, etc.
I guess that explains why my kids aren't super into Santa, but I'm just curious what other families do.
There's been a debate recently about this on a local parenting board here, and I found the topic so fascinating.
Responses ranged from, "I'm an adult with kids of my own and I *still* don't acknowledge to my own parents that Santa is real!" to, "We want our kids to be able to trust us no matter what and perpetuating the myth of Santa feels like lying, so we don't believe in Santa in our house."
We don't go overboard in the Santa department here, we just mention here and there about how Santa's coming or Santa will bring the presents, etc. But I don't do a whole lot extra to perpetuate the myth; we don't put out milk and cookies on Christmas Eve (honestly I just forget and the kids never ask), we don't do Elf on the Shelf, etc.
I guess that explains why my kids aren't super into Santa, but I'm just curious what other families do.
Comment