Kids' Belief in Santa Myth Is
Healthy, Psychologists Say
By Tanya Lewis, Staff
Writer | December 19, 2013 10:19am ET
http://www.livescience.com/42089-kid-s-belief-in-santa-is-healthy.html
Spoiler alert: This
article contains information suggesting Santa Claus may not be real.
Generally, lying to kids is a bad thing.
But for many children, believing in Santa is a normal and healthy part of
development, psychologists say.
The notion of a man who
flies around the world in a vehicle drawn by flying hoofed mammals, entering
people's homes through their chimneys and delivering presents, all within the
span of a single night, is highly improbable, to say the least. Yet the Santa
Claus myth is a long-standing and powerful tradition for many
families, and may reinforce good values.
"I don't think it's
a bad thing for kids to believe in the myth of someone trying to make people
happy if they're behaving," said Dr. Matthew Lorber, a child psychiatrist
at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. "Imagination is a normal part of
development, and helps develop creative minds."
Mythical story, real
values
Santa Claus is just one
mythical figure many kids believe in, along with the Tooth Fairy, the Easter
Bunny and other fairy-tale creatures.
Children use their imaginations all the time, even if they know the resulting
creations are fiction. When kids play cops and robbers, they know they aren't
really cops or robbers, Lorber said. In fact, psychologists worry about kids
who lack the ability to write or tell creative stories, he said.
The Santa story is also
deeply embedded in popular culture, with Santa showing up at shopping malls and
in plenty of TV shows and movies, said Stephanie Wagner, a clinical
psychologist at the NYU Child Study Center in New York.
"I don't think we
could necessarily say it's a good thing, but I would certainly say it's not
harmful," Wagner told LiveScience. Christmas brings families together, and
the Santa myth reinforces these bonds, she said.
The Christmas tradition
also reinforces some positive habits, such as writing letters to Santa. Lots of
kids don't like to write, but they'll make the effort to write these letters,
Wagner said.
Breaking the hard truth
But like many good
things, the Santa story eventually comes to an end. Kids stop believing in
Santa at different ages. Often, a friend at school will break the news.
Kids will also try to
figure it out for themselves, when they start to notice that the story doesn't
quite add up. For instance, they might stay up late trying to catch Santa
delivering presents. Questioning what's real and what's not is a normal part of
mental development, Lorber said.
When children ask
their parents whether Santa
is real, parents need to decide whether the child really is ready to
know the truth, Lorber said. The best way to handle that is to ask the child if
he or she still believes in Santa. If they do, it might be too soon to tell
them.
"I think most
parents have a good feel as to when their children can accept the truth,"
Lorber said. When parents do reveal the truth, they can tell their kids that
the spirit of Christmas is real, and tell them about the real St. Nicholas.
Some families will go to
extreme lengths to ensure their kids continue to believe in Santa. Parents should
ask themselves whether they're perpetuating the myth to make their child happy
or merely for their own enjoyment, Lorber said.
Of course, many children
grow up not believing in Santa, either because they don't celebrate Christmas
or follow traditions of a different culture. And some families who celebrate
Christmas don't raise their kids to believe in Santa, and that's healthy too,
Lorber said. However, if that's the case, parents should make sure their kids
know that other children believe in the story and tell them not to ruin it for
others.
Santa may be a Christmas
tradition. "However, the spirit of giving to poor and to the needy, and
the spirit of family and being together — that is universal," Lorber said.
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