Marlborough Express

There’s no right or wrong if it’s all a myth

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and giant peaches. Adding to the weirdness of it all, it’s as if the grown-ups then decided to try to convince kids that this particular storybook is real. Super-intelligen­t spiders? Yup kids, Charlotte’s

Web actually started as a true crime podcast.

To be fair, I think most of the angry backlash came from people who were exposed as participan­ts in the ongoing lie, blown wide open on the street’s of the country’s sunniest city. I’m not judging here – my daughter was a believer in Santa too. Now she’s a little older, I assume she stopped believing, but we don’t talk about it out of politeness. It’s embarrassi­ng for all concerned.

I was never much of a believer in Santa myself as a kid, so I wasn’t interested in making him seem real. But even so, I allowed myself to become part of the lie. It is this passivity that has been one of my central moral failings in life. At some point, I hope she realised it was just a bit of fun.

Anyway, I like to believe that most of these upset people don’t care whether Santa has brown skin or white skin or any other characteri­stics, or even gender, as long as the costume generally matches up. Just for God’s sake don’t make them look like the liars they are in front of their kids.

But then there were the others – the anti-pc grinches; the pompous idiots who raged against the idea of having a bicultural approach to Christmas. The keep-santapale brigade who see Hana

Ko¯ ko¯ as a brown-skinned outrage. Truth is crumbling. European culture is being appropriat­ed by Ma¯ oris!

Seriously, if this is your treasured culture, then your culture is lame. Or rather, your culture is simply pop culture. Santa was, and is, just another bit of shared, ongoing corporatis­ed fiction, like James Bond, or the Briscoes Lady.

With this in mind, we should perhaps fight to take Santa back. We could hew more closely to what I assume are the reasons most people joined the fiction in the first place.

Remember: we presumably just wanted to give our kids a few years of magic and wonder, before cold, hard reality kicked in. It was about generosity.

Maybe empires are crumbling. I guess we’re just in that difficult transition period where we move from Classic Pa¯ keha¯ Santa to a world where Santa can potentiall­y look like anyone. (Heck, I see Dr Who is now a woman, which seems just fine to me.)

The key to avoiding any problems in the future is to let our kids know the truth that good people come in all shapes and sizes and colours. The important thing is what Santa represents.

So like I said, if we can all just get our lies lined up, then we can move on together.

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