FSS Newsletter :: December 2003
Quote of the Month
Destiny is not a matter of chance, it is a matter of choice;
it is not a
thing to be waited for, it is a thing to be pursued.
— William Jennings Bryan
The Real Santa Claus
By: Ashleigh V., SNN Senior Editor, Garden Valley Collegiate,
Winkler, MB
There are a few earthshattering moments in everyone’s
lives that they will remember for as long as they live. Moments
that they remember every detail about: where they were sitting,
what they were doing, and so on. Some older people remember
where they were when they heard JFK was assassinated; for
me, it’s the day I learnt Santa Claus didn’t exist.
I was in grade 4 and my class was having a heated discussion
over the existence of a certain fat guy in a red suit. It
was the believers vs. the non-believers, and insults of “your
lying” and “your parents don’t know anything”
were flying across the room.
Then, one smart non-believer posed the question to the teacher.
The teacher proceeded to do something that I think no one
except your parents have the right to do: he told us that
there was no Santa Claus. Now, to a 9 year old, there are
few people smarter than your teacher, so I was pretty worried.
I ran home after school in a state of shock. They couldn’t
be right. I wouldn’t believe it. Yet, I had already
begun to have my doubts, and I was prompted to ask the question
that most parents dread, “Mommy, is there a Santa Claus?”
My mom took one look at my pleading face and sat me on her
lap. She showed me the entry on Saint Nicholas in the encyclopedia
and read it aloud. Explaining to me that there was no Santa
Claus today, but that there had once been a real Saint Nick
a long time ago.
As the realization of what my mother was telling me dawned
on me, I began to see that the elaborate deception, which
had been with me my whole life, was over.
It stood to reason that, if there was no Santa, there could
be no Easter Bunny, no Tooth Fairy...all my childhood delusions
hit the floor with one dull thud.
My mom then explained to me something that I will always
hold with me. Something that I will one day tell my kids when
they ask me the same question. She told me that, although
there isn’t a real person named Santa Claus, there will
always be a Santa. Santa isn’t about elves and toys
and flying reindeer, he’s about giving and loving everyone.
The spirit of Santa
lives on through the imaginations of children and in the hearts
of their parents.
Today, I have to admit that Christmas has lost some of its
magic for me. I don’t get as excited on December 1st,
counting down the “sleeps” for Santa to come.
It’s not really until I see little kids at the mall
sitting on Santa’s lap, their faces beaming with excitement,
that I remember my time on that lap. And what it was like
to have such a complete trust and belief
in something so good. That’s when I realize what Christmas
is all about. That’s when it feels like Christmas. The
magic of childhood is a wonderful thing.
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