Anonymous wrote:No, Santa isn’t harmful. It’s a fun tradition with a very short window, that children naturally grow out of. And then they do the same for their own children because they remember how awesome it was.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you think Santa is harmful to children? Do you tell your kids there’s no Santa because you want them thinking logically and rationally?
How do we keep our kids safe and logical when Santa keeps threatening their independent and reality based lives with presents and candy we all know he doesn’t bring?
Teaching our kids all-or-nothing thinking does not keep them safe, nor is it logical. What if your kid has an imaginary friend they created - are you going to disabuse them of that notion, because you think it won’t keep them safe or logical?
Newsflash: people can be logical and rational *and also* believe in imagination and fun and make-believe, especially for kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you think Santa is harmful to children? Do you tell your kids there’s no Santa because you want them thinking logically and rationally?
How do we keep our kids safe and logical when Santa keeps threatening their independent and reality based lives with presents and candy we all know he doesn’t bring?
Teaching our kids all-or-nothing thinking does not keep them safe, nor is it logical. What if your kid has an imaginary friend they created - are you going to disabuse them of that notion, because you think it won’t keep them safe or logical?
Newsflash: people can be logical and rational *and also* believe in imagination and fun and make-believe, especially for kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you think Santa is harmful to children? Do you tell your kids there’s no Santa because you want them thinking logically and rationally?
How do we keep our kids safe and logical when Santa keeps threatening their independent and reality based lives with presents and candy we all know he doesn’t bring?
Teaching our kids all-or-nothing thinking does not keep them safe, nor is it logical. What if your kid has an imaginary friend they created - are you going to disabuse them of that notion, because you think it won’t keep them safe or logical?
Newsflash: people can be logical and rational *and also* believe in imagination and fun and make-believe, especially for kids.
Anonymous wrote:Do you think Santa is harmful to children? Do you tell your kids there’s no Santa because you want them thinking logically and rationally?
How do we keep our kids safe and logical when Santa keeps threatening their independent and reality based lives with presents and candy we all know he doesn’t bring?
Anonymous wrote:This is dependent on an individual family.
Parents who have their kids do the santa thing should NEVER expect anyone, child or adult, to go along with their myth. But if that's what they want to do/follow/believe in their own household, that's fine.
Anonymous wrote:This is dependent on an individual family.
Parents who have their kids do the santa thing should NEVER expect anyone, child or adult, to go along with their myth. But if that's what they want to do/follow/believe in their own household, that's fine.