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We constantly deceive and lie to our children that we love about Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, the Tooth Fairy, etc., in order to "make them happy." Even agnostics/atheists often do this out of social conditioning. Then at some point our children learn it is all a pack of lies that nearly everyone engages in.
What do you think the consequences are from this? What do our children really learn from this? Is it worth it?

Heraclitus 8 Nov 26
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1

So, I didn't do Santa and the Easter Bunny etc... with mine. I regret it. They lost their wonder too early.

I agree that it is important to have a sense of wonder and I understand your sense of regret. But, I don't agree that Santa and the Easter Bunny are the only way to have a sense of wonder. In fact, it would be sad if that were the case. I still have a sense of wonder about life and the universe. In some ways, it is stronger than it was when I was a child. The more I have learned about reality, the greater my curiosity and sense of wonder have grown.

@Heraclitus those rituals aren't the only way, for sure. They also aren't the only way I encouraged logic over wonder. And maybe they'll totally Benjamin Button the wonder and awe. Maybe I'm just high on cold medicine and missing my babies being babies.

1

I didn’t - Long felt that when my children figured out such lies.. they’d realize I was capable of lying to them … which I feel is the lesson children eventually learn from such behavior. Their mother did the ‘tooff fairy’ thing … I’d just smile when they asked, they understood ~

It’s one thing to make them aware that people can & do lie, but something altogether wrong being the one who lies to them. I found my children to be quite resilient when confronted with reality, and impressively capable of determining the truth, as I suspect most are.

Varn Level 8 Nov 26, 2018
2

I really don't think it's a big deal. Santa is a story, and one that we tell as real until the child is old enough to understand. Stories are good for us...

Yes, I agree that stories are good for us when we know it is a story. But is deception good for us and for the relationship with have with our parents?

@Heraclitus: I guess that depends on what you mean by "deception." With most Santa stories it's pretty much tongue-in-cheek (Nudge nudge. Grin grin, wink wink, say no more, Squire).

Now Elf on the Shelf, and using Santa as a way to force kids to behave... I do think that is deceptive, and I would agree, that's harmful to kids. I've always felt the most skeevy Christmas song ever written is "He sees you when your sleeping... He knows when you're awake." That song is disturbing on so many levels.

That being said, I still love Santa. Tim Allen's Santa is one of my favorite. But you're right, it's best told as a story, not as a lie.

1

Yes, I agree that pretend play is good for us, but doesn't this rather miss the point? The question is whether or not deception & lies from our parents are good for us and for our relationship with our parents.

@Heraclitus
I think it depends on all the specifics. If parents use it to manipulate the child's behavior, the kid can pick up on that and might understandably have lingering resentments, especially if it was part of an overall pattern of parental behavior. But if the parents were not in the habit of lying about other things, and were doing it only because they thought it would delight and entertain the child, then that intent is also evident to the child as s/he grows up and reflects on the past.

I've never had kids, but if I did, I think I would want to participate in the seasonal holidays but do it more in the spirit of play-acting for everyone involved, rather than a grand deception perpetrated on the child by the parents.

4

I think as they grow, they learn the value of telling innocent stories to, and playing pretend with, small children.
The value of growing up. There is a time for childish things and a time to leave such things behind.
And, to never completely trust what people say, which may be the most important thing a child can learn.

Pretending there is a fairy collecting teeth in exchange for money (which I believe was a way for people to distract frightened children from the fact that parts of their face were falling off, before they are old enough to really understand what is happening) is only supposed to put off the hard questions until they are ready. It's not a deception meant to hold any water or influence anyone's behavior.
I think of it as game, a test timed to their internal clocks. Once they grow to the point of critical thought, to doubt, they will ask more questions and solve the mystery.

A very interesting argument that children need to be taught not to trust anyone including their own parents. I'll have to give that some thought though I still think it can be damaging to the parent-child relationship.
It never occurred to me when I lost a tooth that my face was falling off. As soon as I got a loose tooth I was told that it was perfectly normal and that my baby teeth would be replaced with adult teeth. So, I never worried about it a bit.

@Heraclitus "I'll have to give that some thought though I still think it can be damaging to the parent-child relationship"

  • Which makes this another situation where parents have to make a decision regarding what is more important; the long-term well-being of the child or the child's emotion towards them.

One of my first gradeschool teachers was a bit... unorthodox. He set up brief mind games. For example, one student who frequently arrived late was suddenly in a classroom where the wrong answers are correct, and we'd see how long it took for him to go with the herd mentality. (He cracked within five minutes.)
Or, Teach would say something we all knew to be false and assert that this was true because he was older than we were and authority is what makes a statement right or wrong.
Etc.
It was often frustrating. Most of the time we wanted him to do like the other teachers and just tell us what we were supposed to think instead of making us work for it.

No doubt some people would have harsh things to say about him, but I love that man, for trying to prepare us for some of the real dangers in reality.

@MLinoge I never minded mind games as long as I knew they were mind games. In fact, I rather enjoyed them as they made me think. I much enjoy philosophy which is full of mind games. But, if you are suggesting that parents deceive their children into believing in Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, and the Tooth Fairy as a mind game to enhance their analytical skills...well, I really don't think so.

@Heraclitus I can't speak for other families. It's what I deduced from my own experience.
Once the youngest of my siblings figured it out from the abundant clues we left, we stopped talking about any of those things altogether.
With the lesson learned the games were over and no further deception followed because it was never about keeping us deceived.
It was about the learning.

3

My son, now an adult, still resents the fact that we lied to him about these things.
On the other hand when at five years old he accused us of lying about Santa et al. However without being told he lumped Jesus/ etc in with them as equally if not more ridiculous.
I was called in to his school when he was eight and berated by his teacher for Ben having confronted his teacher publicly and asking her in front of the whole class why she was lying to them all, about Santa.
I simply asked "were you lying?" she said "Technically I suppose so, yes"
I looked to the Head teacher (principle) who was desperately trying not to laugh and asked if they seriously expected me to punish my child for telling the truth to his peers when some one was lying to them.
I ended up telling my son that in future he should wait till after class and speak to the teacher privately and ask her to explain why Santa is considered a socially acceptable untruth.

0

Kids will have to learn to accept reality soon enough. There is no harm in encouraging imagination or fantasy as long as you don't tell them there's some horrible monster in the sky who will torture them for eternity of they don't follow a laundry list of impossible rules and maintain some unreachable standard of thought and deed.

JimG Level 8 Nov 26, 2018

Surely this can be done by simply telling the myth as a story without asking them to believe it, after all most kids understand Aladdin and the Djinni is just a story and don't go about hopefully rubbing flashlights.

@maturin1919 My point exactly, they don't believe it, they know it is just a story, as you rightly say pretend and make believe.

0

Kids live in a nice and cozy world until they don't.....

0

Are you suggesting that telling children only the truth is a good idea?

Yes, I suppose that I am, though I realize that that is a more complicated question than it first appears. But, I cannot argue that deliberately lying and deceiving your children is a good thing even though one might think there are justifiable reasons for it. This is not to say that one should tell them the whole truth about everything as the whole truth would just lead to confusion and misunderstandings that would be harmful. Children are not capable of understanding the whole truth in many instances. This is also not to say that one doesn't tell children stories and fairy tales as long as they understand that they are stories and fairy tales that are not completely true or real. But to lie and deceive children is to teach them that lying and deceiving is a good thing and the proper way to live just as imposing violence on children teaches them violence is a viable solution to the problems of life. Worse, parents who lie and deceive their children also teach their children that lying and deceiving are wrong. This teaches children that hypocrisy is a valid and proper way to live. This, I think, explains a lot of what is wrong with society and the world in general. We live a world of trained hypocrites.

4

I let my kid in on the Santa secret a few years ago. He's 8 now, and I explained that it is fun to pretend. Also it's not his job to inform other kids of this knowledge. I let him figure out the bunnies and fairies.

1

If kids stopped getting Christmas presents whenever they stopped believing in Santa Claus I could see how that would be a cruel fantasy to perpetuate, but since that is not the case I see no harm in playing some make-believe with them while they are young. It can stimulate their imagination and add more charm to the season. When they do find out it is a fantasy they are usually old enough to take it in stride and not have any ill effects. Perpetuating religious believes on a child is more harmful because the fantasy may never end. The parents still believe in it so why should the child ever question it? The indoctrination and brainwashing only gets worse with time, making it harder for them to escape.

In general, I agree with your point except that I can't agree there is never any harm. I think it depends on both how the parents handle it and how the child reacts to the deception. Some children just seem to take the deception is stride and never really think about it much. I was a pensive introspective child and the deception not only by my parents, but by all authority figures, and by society in general changed my outlook on the world forever. Now, you could argue that my learning that there was a lot of deception and BS in the world, and that one should never completely trust anything one is told was a good thing, but it certainly didn't feel like it at the time.

1

Perhaps,reality must be given to children in small doses,remember the purple Dinosauer "Barney" from a few years ago? Reality has Jurassic Park,and the killing machines they are,otherwise nightmares can be expected?

Maybe it is just not children who need reality in small doses. Maybe it is adults, too. How many billions of adults have lived with some sort of fantasy their whole lives? Or maybe if we learned more about honesty and reality earlier in life, we wouldn't have to spend our entire lives clinging to religious myths and fantasies.

@Mile1947

Barney, the purple dinosaur was so saccharine he made my teeth hurt. Shudder.

3

What's amazing is that the Santa Claus story is much more plausible than the story of a being that created a universe with 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 stars knocked up a teenage Jewish girl, then entered Earth in human form ~2000 years ago.

Adults don't believe the Santa Claus story, but they do believe the Jesus story.

BD66 Level 8 Nov 26, 2018

Do you think adults would believe in Santa Claus if his story also promised eternal life in paradise?

@Diogenes1972 Jesus is Santa Claus for adults.

3

I remember being confused. Why were my parents lying to me? When I got older, I realized that they were also lying to me about God. I think parents ought to be honest with their children.

2

I'm the parent of two boys. I never told my children any of these lies. In fact, I was quite clear from the beginning. In retrospect, my parents never lied to me either. So I got it from them.

3

this is an example on how to not do it

4

"Mama, is Santa Claus real?" my daughter Claire, 6, asked before bedtime. "Kids on the playground say he's not real."

"No, honey, Santa Claus is not real," I said gently. "Parents buy Christmas presents for kids."

"Thank you for being honest, Mama," Claire said earnestly. "Please don't tell Daddy I know. He get such a big kick out of it."

On Christmas Eve, Terry used white flour to make snowy, reindeer footprints on the living room carpet, leading to a plate of cookies.

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