When I was 6, I wrote Santa using the Phoenician alphabet (we had a lot of encyclopedias back then). My parents stayed up till dawn trying to figure out what I wanted.
I feel so lucky: My parents never made be believe in Santa. They let me know the poetry of our loved ones giving presents to us. Not because we were being “nice” or “behaving”, but because they loved us.
We believed in Santa, but only as a kind of fairy tale, along with the Easter Bunny & Tooth Fairy. Not having much money, we also learned that gifts were given from love & concern, so getting clothing for BD or Christmas was NOT a bad thing, it was proof our parents loved us & cared for us. Likewise, it wasn’t the number of presents we got, because maybe a sibling needed more than you did.
i_am_the_jam about 3 years ago
When I was 6, I wrote Santa using the Phoenician alphabet (we had a lot of encyclopedias back then). My parents stayed up till dawn trying to figure out what I wanted.
Sisterdame about 3 years ago
I feel so lucky: My parents never made be believe in Santa. They let me know the poetry of our loved ones giving presents to us. Not because we were being “nice” or “behaving”, but because they loved us.
LadyPeterW about 3 years ago
We believed in Santa, but only as a kind of fairy tale, along with the Easter Bunny & Tooth Fairy. Not having much money, we also learned that gifts were given from love & concern, so getting clothing for BD or Christmas was NOT a bad thing, it was proof our parents loved us & cared for us. Likewise, it wasn’t the number of presents we got, because maybe a sibling needed more than you did.
Liverlips McCracken Premium Member about 3 years ago
But what if Santa has lost his secret decoder ring?
Doctor Toon about 3 years ago
Bad news Eddie
The naughty list is not written in code and your name is on it
cuzinron47 about 3 years ago
I’m pretty sure Santa doesn’t have the code.