i can't help but think that
so it was mentioned the other day why someone i know was raised without santa. it has everything to do with the fact that one of her parents was terribly hurt when s/he found out that his/her parents had lied about it. i must say, i too was hurt, but not that hurt.
or should i say, i was disappointed. as a child, i loved the illusion. i easily believed in gremlins and santa. i believed in the tooth fairy and the easter bunny. i believed in ewoks and all things in the movies and tv. but when i was 6 and found out about santa, i was disappointed.
that was the year that i wrote santa a letter of all the things i wanted for christmas. i managed to get most everything on that list and then some. how lucky was i that he had gotten my letter? how unlucky was my mother who had saved the letter in my scrapbook? i found it in the book and i knew. suddenly, i knew.
ironically, it hadn't occurred to me that the others were just like santa. that took a little linger. but i felt disappointed. i felt sad. and i felt so sad about it that i didn't want to tell my parents. i didn't until i was a young adult. how could i? how could i ruin something that they had constructed just for me? a little bit of magical fun for a child.
how did you feel?

I felt guilty because I found out via snooping!
i would have felt guilty if i had said something to my parents...
I actually figured out the Easter Bunny first when I stumbled upon some Easter grass in the cabinets. That's when everything was 'explained' to me... it was... well like being let in on a great secret! But that may have been because I have younger siblings
bre- i am practically an only child, by that i mean there is no one younger, so there was no secret for me to be in on. do you think you would have felt different if it were santa first?