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- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!att!cbnewse!pwyc
- From: pwyc@cbnewse.cb.att.com (peter.w.chen)
- Subject: Re: Lying to children
- Organization: AT&T
- Distribution: na
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 17:41:27 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Dec30.174127.26687@cbnewse.cb.att.com>
- Lines: 42
-
- In article <C03027.M71@encore.com> rcollins@encore.com writes:
- >I was wondering if anyone else out there is a scrooge like myself in not
- >wanting to lie to my kids about Santa. I catch hell from every other
- >adult about it. I'm going to give 3 reasons why I don't do lie
- >to my kids about it.
- >
- >1. I teach my kids lying is wrong. Enough said.
- >
- >2. A few days ago my 5 year old asked regarding her friend, "why is her
- >mom so mean?" [Apparently, her mom had said "no" on several requests to
- >play, spend the night, etc. and the daughter complained about her mom.
- >I noticed that the friend had been riding a new pair of in-line roller
- >skates every time I saw her since Christmas.] My reply to my daughter
- >was, "Who gave her those roller skates that she has been enjoying so
- >much recently?" My daughter answered, "Santa Claus." (I let it go for
- >then; we didn't have enough time to talk about it.) I don't think it
- >would hurt most kids to know their gifts came from their sacrificing,
- >generous, loving parents, rather than old Saint Nick.
-
- Children are much smarter than many parents give them credit for, and they
- are getting world-wise at ever younger ages now. I never told my 4-year-old
- that there's no Santa; but since I never explicitly told her there was,
- she's been able to pretty much deduce the facts from her own observations.
- Sure she hears about Santa in books and TV, but I think any notions about
- a real Santa are quickly dismissed in her own mind when she sees the
- swarm of sidewalk and department store santas in the real world. She may
- even say her presents are from Santa without really believing it, just as
- she pretends the form letters from "Minnie Mouse" are really from her "best
- friend" Minnie, or that the Minnie she saw in Disneyworld is the real thing:
- she knows it's not the real Minnie, but has lots of fun pretending.
-
- On rare occassions she'd say something like "there's no real Santa Claus,
- right dad?", and I just answer "right", without making a big deal out of it;
- she just needs some confirmations of her observations at this point. I don't
- see any benefit in constructing some BIG LIE about this; in fact I think many
- kids see through the LIE faster than their parents think, and some will
- pretend to believe in Santa well into grade school years just to "please"
- their parents. I fail to see how such miscommunication can benefit the
- parent-child relationship in any way.
- ==
- Peter Chen
- pwyc@ihspa.att.com
-