How To Make Christmas Magical For Your Children No Matter What They Believe

*For adult eyes only* 👀🎅🎄

If you’re reading this while also entertaining a little one on your lap, we suggest you bookmark this page and come back when kids’ eyes aren’t around.

Because we’re talking about Christmas. Father Christmas to be exact.

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ArtMarie via Getty Images

Every parent wants to make the festive season magical for their children, but does that all end when they find out the truth about Santa?

A mum on Mumsnet has shared that her 10-year-old son has recently found out about Santa and “feels like the magic has gone”.

“He’s feeling quite sad I think,” she wrote on 20 November. “I’d be really grateful for any tips to restore a bit of magic please.”

Scroll down to learn from the advice she received.

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Mumsnet

1. Get children involved in creating the magic.

One mum explained: “I’d get your son involved in the preparations like choosing what to eat and cooking, helping with presents and wrapping, helping with decorations.

“Now that he is older, he can help create magic. He will still get presents.”

Some parents said their children enjoyed doing the “adult responsibilities” at Christmas, like helping put the presents under the tree.

One mum said her son has now called himself her “little helper” and told his younger siblings he is an elf.

“His main job is to check the wooden advent calendar and make sure I’ve put chocolates in it,” she said.

2. Introduce a surprise.

Someone suggested shaking things up a bit so there are still surprises on the big day.

“You can change how you do presents,” they said. “Maybe introduce a small surprise gift at the table after lunch, or a Boxing Day gift on the Christmas tree?”

3. Remind them of family traditions.

One Mumsnet user explained that children will go through a transition at Christmas from “childhood awe” to appreciating family traditions. Remind your child of these traditions that you do every year, such as putting up the decorations and having afternoons watching Christmas films. 

“Carry on with all the festive traditions you’ve always had and your son will get the Christmas vibe,” she said. 

“We’ve just treated it like a story or a make believe game, even to tracking Santa on Norad."”

- Mumsnet user.

4. Carry on the Santa story.

Many parents said even though their children no longer believe, they still go along with the Father Christmas story as a “make believe game”.

“My daughter was about eight or nine when she stopped believing but even now at 13 we still do the whole Santa thing,” one mum wrote.

“We do a stocking at the end of the bed and the last few years she would still even put out a plate with snacks and a drink for Santa.

“We’ve just treated it like a story or a make believe game, even to tracking Santa on Norad. Just because the believing has stopped it doesn’t mean the magic has to.”

One mum agreed, adding: “We always make some kind of scandalous mess and there is usually trouble of some kind caused by the reindeer. [The kids] know it’s me and it’ll probably feel more like waking up on April Fools day to see what pranks I’ve left for them, but it will still be fun.”

5. Make new ‘giving’ traditions.

“I have made my kids aware that not all children are as fortunate as them,” one mum explained.

“This year my children will be buying gifts for the giving tree in our local supermarket (for children less fortunate). Before now they assumed Santa took care of all that.”

Another mum agreed adding: “What about selecting a gift for another child, to be donated to a charity that distributes them to families in need?”

The original poster responded to the comments and ideas about making Christmas magical: “My eyes have welled up reading these ideas.”

Read the full Mumsnet thread here

Before You Go

10 Great-Value Gadgets for Christmas
Amazon Echo Dot(01 of10)
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Hands free, voice-controlled and able to connect via Bluetooth to almost any device in the home, simply summon Alexa via the Echo Dot to demand music, alarms, news, solve arguments over who scored in the 1979 FA Cup Final. You can even regulate lights, heating and household appliances, presuming they’re compatible and connected. The device updates automatically via the cloud, so it’s always getting smarter, adding new features and skills. One day it will almost certainly rule the world and enslave the human race, but until then, enjoy!
Price: £35
(credit:Amazon)
Google Home Mini(02 of10)
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If Amazon's Alexa isn't your gig then maybe Google's is. The Google Home Mini offers the same discrete size but with the same powerful AI inside. There's a small but still meaty speaker that's perfect for giving you daily news updates or your day's schedule. Unlike the Echo Dot there's no 3.5mm headphone jack so you can attach this to your other speakers.
Price: £34.99 on sale (normally £49.99)
(credit:Google)
Ultimate Ears Roll 2 wireless speaker(03 of10)
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Versatile, eminently portable and waterproof with it, the Ultimate Ears Roll 2 looks exceptionally funky and comes in half a dozen colour schemes. It can also be wirelessly connected to other UE speakers to create an even bigger sound for communal freak outs. For something this size it packs a considerable aural punch, and the sound stays crisp and bassy even at high volume. What’s more, it’ll pump out the tunes for nine hours when fully charged – more than enough to keep everyone partying into the early hours.
Price: £55
(credit:Ultimate Ears)
Google Chromecast Ultra(04 of10)
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For anyone who loves great film and TV, it’s a travesty that so much of it is viewed on a six-inch screen. The Chromecast Ultra plugs into a TV’s HDMI port to make streaming from other devices, be it a phone, tablet or PC, a piece of cake. This premium version can stream in 4K and HDR so it's futureproof too. It can also stream music to the TV, play games and apps. Price: £69 (credit:Google)
Tile Mate(05 of10)
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The Tile Mate is a Bluetooth tracker that you can attach to anything you might need to locate. Via an app on your phone, you simply press a button and the Tile Mate rings. Similarly, if you have access to the Tile Mate but have lost your phone, you press a button on the Tile Mate and it causes your phone to ring, providing it’s within a range of 100ft. But what if you attach a Tile Mate to something that gets lost or stolen and could be miles away? If you register the item as lost, when someone else with a Tile Mate comes within Bluetooth range, you will receive an alert notifying you of the location.
Price: £19.99
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Anker PowerCore 5000 Portable Charger(06 of10)
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It’s not the sexiest gift out there, but it’s so practical that whoever you give it to as a gift will remember you fondly every time it saves their phone from dying at exactly the wrong time. Its compact, tubular design means it slides into the pocket easily, and it provides enough power to charge two iPhone 6’s or one Galaxy S7, but can be used to revive any phone or tablet. Its durability means it’s ideal for those who like to spend much of their time in the great outdoors.
Price: £12
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Samsung Gear Virtual Reality Headset(07 of10)
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The Samsung Gear VR hooks up with Samsung phones like the Note 8 and S7 to provide a fully-immersive experience, and with over 800 apps to choose from (including Minecraft, Endspace and Paint VR to name but three). There’s plenty to keep gamers hooked, as well as people looking for more cerebral VR experiences. If your giftee doesn’t own a Samsung smartphone, or you don’t want to spend quite as much money, try the popular Google Cardboard (£15), a fold-out VR headset that is compatible with most phones, and works remarkably well.
Price: £80
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John Lewis Astro DAB radio(08 of10)
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DAB radios can get quite expensive, but John Lewis’s own brand is fantastic value and gives you a high-end product at a price that won’t put too big a dent in your Christmas budget. It looks great, has a big LCD screen showing the time (so makes a great bedside alarm clock too) and the sound quality is excellent. If you want to be thriftier still, check out the Goodman’s Pebble (around £23).
Price: £60
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Creative Outlier One Wireless Headphones(09 of10)
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Great sound quality, a long-lasting battery and beautifully designed, these in-ear Bluetooth headphones are fantastic value for money, and perfect for both sports and high-fidelity geeks alike. They are sweat-proof and water-proof, so no problems jogging in the rain, while the battery goes for 9.5 hours before needing to be recharged. Thanks to its in-line mic and remote, the user can control songs and make phone calls without having to fish out their smartphone.
Price: £35
(credit:Creative Outlier One Wireless Headphones)
Moov Now Fitness Tracker(10 of10)
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Given the price of most fitness trackers, the Moov Now comes in at unbeatable value. It’s got a few tricks up its sleeve too, like providing audio coaching on technique, whether the wearer is hitting the ground too hard on their running stride, or needs a bit of extra motivation to get up that hill on their bike. It fits around the ankle or wrist, and is compatible with running, swimming, cycling, boxing or general fitness workouts. Like other fitness trackers, it also monitors your step count and sleep patterns, all done wirelessly via an app on your phone.
Price: £55
(credit:Moov Now Fitness Tracker)