Tag Archives: santa

Claus and Effect

Gather ‘round, parents. Your Auntie Aprill wants to tell you a story. A beautiful Christmas story about childhood and the magic of Santa. And what happens when it all goes horribly, horribly wrong. 

It was a few years ago on a night just like tonight, with the warm glow inside the house keeping the cold and darkness at bay. My eldest child came to me, the very vision of childhood innocence in his pajamas, a smile on his lips and a slight twinkle in his eye. 

And it all went sharply downhill from there. 

In my defense, flimsy as it is, he asked me point blank. 

“Is it you?” he asked. 

It’s time, I thought to myself. He had been hinting for weeks that he knew The Truth. Luckily I was prepared. You don’t gaslight your own children for a good chunk of a decade without having an escape plan. And mine was a doozy. A Christmas narrative so beautiful and heartwarming, Dickens himself would bow to my obviously superior skills. 

I put on my most serene and saintly smile, motherly wisdom practically radiating out of my pores, and began. 

“It is, sweetie, but now that you know…”

I got no further. 

“What!?” he cried out. “It is!? But I didn’t really want to know!”

Oh. Oh. Oooh.

“But listen!” I said, a bit too loudly, desperately trying to swallow my panic. “A long time ago, there really was a Santa Claus that gave presents to poor children and when he died…”

“Santa’s DEAD!?” he gasped. 

Son of a Blitzen. 

“No! Baby, no! Well, kind of…the point is he inspired millions of people for hundreds of years to keep the Christmas magic he started alive by…”

“By lying to kids?”

He had me by the sugarplums there. 

“It’s not lying…per se. It’s…more like an untruth. A glittery, shining untruth that makes children happy.”

The Grinch himself couldn’t have produced a more withering stare. I could literally see my son’s heart shrink three sizes that day. 

“I think I need a minute, mom,” he finally said, throwing a blanket over his head, his preferred method of dealing with Uncomfortable Things. 

And there it was. The moment where I ruined his childhood. The moment where the downward spiral begins. First he’ll start acting out in school, carving candy cane shivs in detention. Then moving on to spray painting “Scrooge Had It Right The First Time” under bridges. Eventually there will be jail time, where he’ll emerge with a homemade tattoo of Krampus featuring comically warped proportions across his entire back. 

Devastated, I headed to the kitchen in search of comfort. But standing in front of the 40 proof eggnog was my husband. 

“He knows. About Santa. It was supposed to be you that he hated!” I told him with the sensitivity and subtlety I’m known for. “I’m the favorite parent!”

To my husband’s credit, he still tried to console me but it was useless. The image of me as the Infallible Tower of Matriarchal Love and Knowledge had been shattered. 

Faintly, I heard my son calling for me from the living room. I gave my husband one last desperate look and turned to face my punishment. 

As I approached, my son climbed up onto the ottoman so we were almost eye-to-eye. The better to headbutt me, I figured. 

“Does keeping the Christmas magic alive mean that someone has to eat the cookies left out for Santa?” he asked. 

I laughed in spite of myself. 

“Yes. Yes it does. And I think I know the perfect person for the job.”

We both smiled as I gently wiped the last of his tears away.

“Now, mom, about the tooth fairy…” 

The year without a Santa Claus

There’s an infamous (at least for me) story from my childhood where I looked at my mom one day and just bluntly said “Santa Claus isn’t real, is he?”

“No, he’s not, sweetie,” my mom replied.

And that was that.

But the infamous part came next. Because I went to school the following day and stood on top of my desk to kindly (and loudly) share this breaking news with all my second grade peers. 

Surprisingly, this did not help my popularity.

And now, all these years later, the joke is on me. Little did I know that in my 30’s I’d still be dealing with this whole “does Santa exist?” controversy. Oh karma, you wily minx. Because see, now that I’m a mom, and need Santa to exist, I can’t find that bastard anywhere.

Let’s start at the beginning.

My son’s first Christmas, when he couldn’t have cared less (since his only interests back then were my boobs and old, gross, fast food receipts) we were lucky enough to randomly run into a Santa while out and about in early December. So we plopped our son down and took a million photos as you are legally required to do. Easy peasy. And they are photos we cherish to this day even despite the fact that both my baby and Santa look like they’re being held at gunpoint.

So, naturally, I just assumed that was how it worked. Last year, I figured we’d run into another one while out shopping or looking for a restaurant that sold spaghetti tacos (did I mention I was pregnant again?). We never did. Luckily, my son was still young enough that it didn’t really matter and I didn’t really care about anything except spaghetti tacos and not puking on random strangers whenever I left the house.

But this year, oh, this year, I came prepared. He’s almost three. And this is his sister’s first Christmas. Time to stop phoning it in as a parent. So, starting the day after Thanksgiving I started Googling where and when Santa would be. I was leaving nothing to chance.

Imagine my surprise then, when two Sundays ago, we went to meet Santa and he wasn’t there. Apparently “Santa will be taking photos until 5 p.m.” meant if you showed up at 4:30 p.m. he’d be gone on what I can only assume was a very important Santa emergency involving happy hour eggnog shots. Luckily, people working the event were super helpful and reassured us that they had “no idea where he was or if he’d be back.”

I was mad, sure. The Momma Bear in me wanted to start smacking people with my festive Santa hat. But I managed to keep my calm. We still had one more weekend before Christmas and my toddler got chocolate as a consolation prize, so crisis averted.

Still, again, I didn’t want to leave anything to chance. I checked, then double checked, then triple checked when and where Santa would be this past Saturday.

7 p.m.

No less than three local event calendars said 7 p.m.

Santa would be hanging out in this particular location until 7 p.m.

Looking back, I should have known better. It was the same location that Santa had abandoned to go on a bender the weekend before. But, silly me, I thought if we showed up three hours before closing time, he’d be there.

Ha!

He wasn’t.

Needless to say, I was frothing at the mouth at this point. And again, the helpful people working the event assured us that “um…I don’t know, man.”

So, again, my son got chocolate as a consolation prize. But I am running out of time and I need some chubby, red jerkface to sit on his ass and interact with my freaking children before I lose it. I need a photo of my baby girl screaming on his lap and one of my son doing that weird toddler smile where it looks like they forgot how to smile. It’s Christmas. Why the hell can’t I find a Santa? Why is this so hard? WHY AM I BEING PUNISHED FOR A MISTAKE I MADE WHEN I WAS SEVEN?!?

Sigh. This is a good lesson for you kids though. Apparently once you’re on the naughty list, you stay on that naughty list. Santa does not forgive nor forget.

Well played, fat man. Well played.