We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013. We love her to pieces.
We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011. She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.
Re: Anyone celebrate Christmas without doing Santa?
I have a Daughter born 2/26/2013. She is pretty much amazing!
Also, I know many people don't agree with me here, but to me, teaching my kids Santa is real, or even just letting them believe he is, seems exactly like lying, and I don't want to lie to my kids about something as trivial as Santa. I don't want to deal with my kid someday realizing Santa is fake and then being upset and knowing that I was the one who allowed that.
I know this is a UO, but it is UO Thursday after all, haha!
First round of Clomid in May 2012= BFP #1, DD born January 2013
BFP #2 in January 2014, DS born September 2014
I figure this way we can extend the fun as long as she wants. I remember pretending to believe in Santa for 2 or 3 years longer than I really did because I didn't want to ruin in for them!! Even after that I still got a few "Santa" presents each year. And DH's parents still give their adult kids gifts from Santa and even the reindeer! It's cute and fun and I don't see any reason to omit Santa altogether, but kids love to play pretend, so I think doing it that way will allow DD to have fun without feeling lied to or betrayed.
We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013. We love her to pieces.
We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011. She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.
As an adult, I am grateful to my parents for doing things to keep our childhood magical and innocent. The only issue I take with parents not doing Santa, is when it is ruined for other kids. As as second grade teacher, I see this a ton, and then I'm on damage control when one kid blurts out, "My mom says there is no Santa!!" I think a conversation needs to be had at home about what Santa is for others and to be respectful of that. My husband is an atheist. No two ways about it. But we will tell DS that he is certainly not allowed to go into school and say, "My dad says there is no God!" Because we respect what God might be to others. I think it's like any parenting choice. You do what works for your family, but not everyone is going to do it the same way, and there is room for differences.
What I decided to do was make the secular and religious celebrations very distinct and different, and then find ways to "Christianize" the secular parts. My kids know that Santa has nothing to do with the birth of Christ. We do the whole elf on the shelf thing, but we call him our evangelizing elf and every night they have to teach him what they learned about Christ that day during Advent studies so the elf can go back to the North Pole and be the Light to all of the other elves. On Christmas Eve we write out the Nativity story and fold it up with our elf, who sits next to Santa's plate of cookies. On the story we tell Santa to read the story to everyone at the North Pole so they can learn the true meaning of Christmas.
We do a very in-depth Advent study in which we stop all other school lessons (apart from math and phonics) to focus on the birth of Christ. This builds anticipation for the celebration of His birth. I think my kids look forward to lighting the candles on Jesus' birthday cake and singing to him on Christmas morning (and then getting to eat cake for breakfast) just as much as they do the opening of the presents. They know what Christmas means.
The older I get, the more I've realized that Christmas, even a solely religious celebration, isn't exactly a Biblical mandate. The early Christian's didn't celebrate it and so there is no "right" or "wrong" way to celebrate it. In fact, as a Christian there is nothing wrong with not celebrating it at all.
People want to argue that Santa and all of that is "Pagan" but they don't realize that just about every aspect of our modern Christmas celebration has pagan roots - the tree, the decorations, the gift giving and placing them under the tree, the mistletoe, the colors....everything. We only give power to the pagan roots when we make them idols.
I guess I feel like we celebrate the birth of Christ every day in our house through our worship. Christmas is a special time to gather with family and do the same thing. There is nothing wrong with making it special for our children too.
The only anti-Santa argument that I feel is valid is the whole lying thing. But it is possible to do it without technically lying. I get in on the fun and talk about Santa and the North Pole in the same way I talk about the Tooth Fairy. I don't feel it is unchristian to have fun and play make believe with your children - God gave children an imagination to use. When my children ask me if Santa is real I always respond with, "What do you think?" and then let them explain it themselves. I've never once had to say that Santa is real because children want to believe so badly. When they ask how Santa travels around the whole world I ask them how they think he does it and they use their critical thinking skills to give excuses and reasons. One day, I have a feeling they will figure it out themselves and realize it was all just a game that was harmless and fun.
We have family that have chosen not to do Santa and I hope their kids don't ruin it for mine. They've come close before and it's really upsetting.
Anyways, we've been judged pretty harshly for doing Santa with our kids, but I'm 100% confident that it takes nothing away from our religious celebration and in fact, enhances it. You just have to be careful not to let the gift-giving, regardless of whether or not Santa is involved, become the focus of your celebration.
I agree that it doesn't have to overshadow the birth of Christ, and I respect the fact that it's possible to successfully celebrate both the religious and secular aspects of Christmas. It's just not for us.
First round of Clomid in May 2012= BFP #1, DD born January 2013
BFP #2 in January 2014, DS born September 2014
Right ovary removed 09.04.2012 via vertical laparotomy
Essure implant placed on remaining tube 06.13.2013; successful followup scan 09.30.2013
I was raised "believing in Santa", I figured it out at a pretty young age but my mom wanted all of us to believe until we were 20. It was pretty silly. I never felt betrayed when I stopped believing. I understood why adults said it. The story on DH's side is similar, except his parent's didn't care that he stopped believing.
We're not going to say that Santa is real and a direct question will get a "Santa represents the spirit if giving" kind of answer. DD will be encouraged to participate in the "who put that under the tree?" Game as she grows up.
All of this isn't set in stone as she is our first and we'll se how it plays out but that is what we discussed.
DD didn't get Santa" this year. I don't foresee that we will change our minds and start doing it later on. It just doesn't feel like our style.
I hope to raise a child who will respect the beliefs of others and therefore not go around trying to convince friends and relatives who believe in Santa that there is no such thing. But ultimately her actions are her own and she may spoil the fun for someone.
We have vehemently vetoed the tooth fairy.
I remember that even though I kind of knew Santa wasn't real, when my dad 'fessed up when I was 10, I started bawling.
I'm still on the fence, but I figure by next year we'll have to decide how we're doing things because by then DD1 will really get what's going on. Maybe we'll stick to Santa stories and Santa filling the stockings but not actually tell them he's real.
BFP1: DD1 born April 2011 at 34w1d via unplanned c/s due to HELLP, DVT 1 week PP
BFP3: DD2 born Feb 2013 at 38w4d via unplanned RCS due to uterine dehiscence
I will never tell any children to be good if they want presents.
We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013. We love her to pieces.
We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011. She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.