Saturday, December 12, 2009
7 Simple Techniques for Keeping Your Child Believing in Santa Claus
Many parents love to see the joy and excitement Santa Claus can bring to their child. For many people, their childhood memories of Santa Claus are the best Christmas memories they have. Keeping your child believing in Santa, however, can be a daunting task. Children are smart these days, and some of the old Santa tricks just don’t get by them anymore. Many children are perpetually plagued with the question, "Is there a Santa Claus?"
Every family may have slightly different Christmas traditions with regards to Santa Claus, but there are some very easy things any person can do to keep the belief in Santa at an all time high. The following 7 techniques will keep your child believing in the magic and wonderment of Santa Claus and you don’t have to be familiar with the history of Santa Claus to apply them.
1) Have your child write a Santa Letter. This can be a simple letter that your child can write to Santa Claus. Children absolutely love to write a letter to Santa, but they occasionally need a little parental guidance to pull it off.
Help your child include a special list of gifts they desire for Christmas into the Santa letter. Many children enjoy getting more creative by drawing or cutting out pictures that represent the gifts they want.
Once the child’s Santa letter is finished, simply mail it to the North Pole. Mail it to the following Santa Claus address: Santa Claus, 1 Candy Cane Lane, North Pole 00001. Don’t bother using a return address, you wouldn’t want it to return as ‘undeliverable’ for any reason.
2) Write a Letter from Santa and have your child receive it in the mail. Create a personalized letter from Santa by directly mentioning your child’s name and certain information about your child in the text. This will make for a much more believable Santa letter. Be sure to make these letters from Santa different for each child in the same household. The child will have no doubt that Santa Claus is coming to town after they receive their personalized letter from Santa!
"I can honestly state as a parent that the personalized letter from Santa has single handedly restored my son’s belief! The look of shock and amazement on his face when he got an ‘authentic letter from Santa’ quickly abolished any doubt he previously had about Santa Claus."
Print the Santa letter on authentic looking letterhead, as this will help to reinforce the believability. Many different styles of paper can be found at your local office supply store.
You can add to the fun by getting your letter from Santa postmarked at the North Pole. Simply send your Santa letter inside another sealed, stamped envelope to: North Pole Christmas Cancellation, Postmaster, 5400 Mail Trail, Fairbanks, AK 99709-9999. (It needs to arrive by December 15th)
Many parents add a certificate for being on Santa’s "Nice List" along with the Santa Letter for added effect. Another great item to add with the Santa letter is a Santa Claus coloring sheet. Combining the personalized Santa letter, the nice certificate, and the Santa Claus coloring sheet is a sure fire method for keeping your child believing.
3) Have your child leave milk and cookies out for Santa Claus on Christmas Eve. This is simple enough to do with your child. It lets your child know YOU still believe, too. Make it a bonding experience for you and your child by baking the cookies together on Christmas Eve. Don’t underestimate how powerful this can be for creating joyful memories of Santa Claus, for both you and your child. Did you know that Santa’s favorite cookie recipe is Chocolate Chip?
Put the fresh cookies on a plate next to a glass of cold milk. You can even put a short letter to Santa Claus next to the cookies and milk. These tasty treats will give Santa the energy he needs to continue traveling to the millions of other households awaiting his arrival.
Don’t forget to leave some crumbs on the table Christmas morning. Your child will feel honored that Santa Claus ate the whole plate of cookies and drank all of the milk before rushing on his way.
4) On Christmas Eve, have your child sprinkle reindeer food on the lawn. Santa Claus gets milk and cookies on Christmas Eve, but what about Rudolph and the rest of the joyful gang? What do they eat? Well, reindeer food, of course!
You can make a batch of environmentally friendly reindeer food with common grocery items such as oats or granola. (Do not use potentially hazardous items, such as glitter in your reindeer food. Although this may make the reindeer food appear to be magical in some way, it can be extremely dangerous if ingested by small children, should they decide to ‘sample’ the reindeer food. It can also be potentially hazardous to the small animals outside such as rabbits, dogs, or cats that may eat the food.)
Once you have the reindeer food mixed up, walk outside with your child on Christmas Eve night and explain the importance of making sure Santa’s sleigh team stays fed. Sprinkle a small amount onto your yard near bushes or trees.
This healthy reindeer snack will give Rudolph and the rest of the reindeer the nourishment they need to continue flying Santa’s heavy sleigh into the night. Your child will be proud for helping Santa Claus on his journey, and is sure to raise the belief in Rudolph and the other reindeer as well.
5) Leave Santa Claus tracks in your house on Christmas Eve. Being sure to not stain your carpet, leave some dirty boot prints by the fireplace (or doorway). Be sure to draw attention to the Santa Claus footprints on Christmas morning. To a child, this is solid evidence that Santa had been to their house.
6) A month or so after Christmas, send your child a postcard from Santa Claus on vacation. This not only keeps your child believing, but reminds your child that Santa is in their hearts all year long. It also answers the common question posed by children after Christmas, "Where is Santa Claus now?"
Be sure to make the postcard from somewhere very warm and sunny. After all, Santa does need a break from all that North Pole snow.
7) Mail your child a birthday greeting from Santa Claus. This technique works in tandem with the personalized Santa Letter you mailed your child previously. Mailing your child a simple birthday card from Santa is an excellent way to keep your child’s belief high throughout the year. Your child will think, "Wow! Santa actually knows my birthday!" The shock on your child’s face will be priceless.
Parents that have extremely intelligent kids or kids that are getting slightly older will genuinely need to utilize all 7 techniques mentioned above to keep their child believing in Santa Claus.
These techniques will assure your child is one of the millions of children that write Santa Letters each and every holiday season. one of the millions of children that believe wholeheartedly in Santa Claus.
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12 Comment:
Thank you so much for these techniques actually i have a nine years daughter and she she really believe in Santa clause.
Really nice tips Raj.. i used to make Aryan write letters and i remember when Alisha was a baby, he would put things in her mouth and disturb her sleep.. haha.. i replied, telling him to be a good boy, not to bully his sister which of course make him improve on his behavior towards baby Alisha!! He still believes and we have to gift him every year in Santa's name along with our own gifts to him! But come and go Christmas, he's up to his naughtiness agin.. ;)
this never worked on me
These are some great tips, but I find that more important than believing in Santa, is believing in the Christmas spirit, and once this is implemented it will never go away. Some simple tasks, such as giving away toys for other children or learning carols, can have a great effect.
Hi...!
Thank you so much for these good techniques actually My friend have a four year boy & He believe in Santa clause.keep posting these type of posts keep it up. :)
otc stocks
Never work for me too.. hahaha
I am 30 year old and still I believe that Santa will come and distribute gifts to every child. Your tips helped me very much because my child did not believe Santa.
Doesn't Santa Claus teach a valuable lesson about giving without expecting a gift in return? When you find out there is no Santa Claus you are also finding out that all those years your parents have been giving you stuff anonymously, then you go on to do the same for your kids and for other people. I am not Christian, but I believe Santa Claus is a very Christian idea.
All your 7 techniques are really good. Let me try it out any one or all 7 and let me know how does it work on my child. Thanks for your tips.
A friend of mine proposed that this was a trick used in order to ease interactions with children, by associating themselves with Santa Claus.Is there merit to this theory, or is it just a weird coincidence on my part? Has anyone else come across Santa-mimicry among child therapists.
My 7-yr old daughter has asked Santa for a hippopotamus for Christmas. Only a hippopotamus will do. So whilst I ponder the location of our new hippodrome to house said hippopotamus, I thought I'd check in with you all and see what crazy thing you're going to be finding room for in your domicile on next Dec 25th.
Has anyone taken a different route in telling your child about Santa Claus?Any ideas/reasons for telling your child either differently or not about Santa Claus?
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