by JO ABI
A very good friend of mine isn’t speaking to me. My son apparently told her son that Santa isn’t real. When her son challenged my son, insisting Santa is real, otherwise how did all those presents get under his tree and who flew the reindee,r my son responded that he KNEW Santa wasn’t real because his mum (me) told him.
Wait, let me defend myself.
Earlier this year my son came home and asked me if Santa is real. Apparently more than one friend at school had told him Santa wasn’t real and that it was the parents who did it all, including eating the cookies and drinking the milk. My son had just turned eight and his first reaction to the boys who told him this was incredulousness and asking me was just his way of confirming what he already knew – that Santa was real and these boys were stupid.
I didn’t end up having to blatantly lie and say Santa is real. I just laughed as he shared their theories and hoped it would all go away.
A couple of days later it became more serious.
“Mum, is Santa real? Some of the boys at my school say he isn’t real and that it’s the parents.”
“Um, let me just finish making dinner. I’ll be with you in a sec.”
I escaped to the kitchen and leaned heavily against the kitchen bench. What the hell do I do now? Do I tell him Santa isn’t real? Do I lie and insist he is real? And by the way, I resent the fact I have to lie to my children in the first place, about Santa, about the Easter Bunny, about the Tooth Fairy. Yes the stories are cute but what does it do to children when they find out their parents are lying to them? Doesn’t the deception perpetrated by those they trust the most damage them more than the fact Santa isn’t real?
He forgot the conversation that night, thank goodness but the next week he asked again and by that stage I’d spoken to my husband and we’d agreed it was probably time to tell him. He wasn’t going to let it go.