My friend told me when I was just 7 that there was no Santa. I wanted a white locker from Santa and she told me she seen the Roches van delivering it when I was at school...Aswell as me being traumatised so was my Mother when I told her!
I wanted a white locker trimmed in pink with a press and drawer to put beside my bed to put my stuff in away from my baby sister.
Why is that strange????
Perfectly normal! :mad:I though my god-child was a little weird when all she wanted for Christmas when she was six was a toy ironing board and iron!!
No i'm sorry but the glasses and hoover are strange. Have you had counselling since.
I'll have an interesting dilemma in a few years time - my son is Irish/Spanish and they don't do presents on Xmas Day there - they wait for the Three-kings on the 6th Jan. Santa exists alright, but he's called St. Nicholas, doesn't wear red and has no sack - god forbid he'd come down a chimney.
The three kings look like Ali-baba, ride camels and magically pass by each house in the early hours of 6th when the gifts appear. worryingly, there is also a mini-christmas in mid-December when a substantial enough Xmas present appears for the child - a direct present from the parents.
Problem lies in the fact that we want to do time about for Xmas - one year here the other there.
The poor child could be very confused cos he has one set of cousins who'll be banging on about Santa, and the other lot who'll be waiting till the new year before they get their lot - calmed by substantial parental gift beforehand. He might also get smart, decide they all exist and end up with three sets of Xmas presents... I'm feeling financially challenged already.
Any hints from those with experience on bridging the cultural divide?
Exactly - when i found out about Santa - that's when i started questioning if God really existed!!What happens when the kids start asking about God?
I'll have an interesting dilemma in a few years time - my son is Irish/Spanish and they don't do presents on Xmas Day there - they wait for the Three-kings on the 6th Jan. Santa exists alright, but he's called St. Nicholas, doesn't wear red and has no sack - god forbid he'd come down a chimney.
The three kings look like Ali-baba, ride camels and magically pass by each house in the early hours of 6th when the gifts appear. worryingly, there is also a mini-christmas in mid-December when a substantial enough Xmas present appears for the child - a direct present from the parents.
Problem lies in the fact that we want to do time about for Xmas - one year here the other there.
The poor child could be very confused cos he has one set of cousins who'll be banging on about Santa, and the other lot who'll be waiting till the new year before they get their lot - calmed by substantial parental gift beforehand. He might also get smart, decide they all exist and end up with three sets of Xmas presents... I'm feeling financially challenged already.
Any hints from those with experience on bridging the cultural divide?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?