What will parents miss out on, if they don't see their child in Santa Claus's lap? Not all parents get caught up in this Santa Claus power struggle with their child. Some parents don't feel slighted when their child's inborn "stranger-danger" alarm goes off. These parents don't take the Santa Claus rejection personally as a sign of disrespect to Mom or Dad. Instead, such parents appreciate this valuable innate stranger-danger radar in their child. These parents know that far worse things can happen in life than having a child who's afraid to sit in Santa Claus's lap.
I asked Judith Barr, a psychotherapist in Brookfield, CT, and author of "Power Abused, Power Healed," about the underlying forces that compel parents to disregard a child's fear and place him in Santa Claus's lap. Judith says this is rooted in parents' own childhood wounds.
(A person need not have a PhD in child psychology to clearly see that the Santa Claus issue is a power struggle.)
But Judith explains: "When we are young, we bury painful feelings. As a defense against these feelings we unconsciously (or in some cases consciously) make what I call early decisions. When we grow, these decisions, if we remain unaware of them, can drive our lives from 'behind the scenes'... and may account for the power struggle."
An example is a child with domineering parents who have unrealistic expectations of him. When the child fails to meet these expectations, he is hollered at, berated, or even smacked. "As he cries himself to sleep," says Judith, "he makes a decision, consciously or unconsciously: You have all the power NOW, Mom and Dad, but you wait! When I grow up, I'LL have all the power, and everybody's gonna know it! The child then grows up...and remains unaware of this decision impacting his life. He becomes a parent himself... and doesn't realize that he has transferred his early feelings for Mom and Dad onto his daughter."
With his daughter, he often acts out the power struggle with Mom and Dad. "When she cries as he places her on Santa Claus's lap, he may be re-enacting in his daughter the type of fear and pain he himself experienced...or he may be acting out his early decision, proving he can control her behavior, force her to do what she is unwilling to do...just as Mom and Dad did with him, or just as he would have liked to do with them."
If you think this is just "psycho babble," then ask yourself why on earth parents, the very adults a young child is supposed to feel protected by and have trust in, would subject a crying child to the terror of sitting in a huge, strange-looking man's lap? Think of this from the child's perspective. It can be downright terrifying. And Mommy or Daddy don't care!
Judith also says that other factors could explain why parents would force a frightened child to sit in Santa Claus's lap. "The fact that some parents take photos to show to their family and friends also stems from a variety of possible reasons...perhaps it's an unconscious 'trophy' or indirect 'proof' the parent has 'won' the power struggle with his/her own Mom or Dad."
Analyzed or not, the forced Santa Claus issue ultimately serves no beneficial purpose. Parents, imagine yourself in your child's place, especially if you're a woman: Imagine being forced to sit in a giant man's lap -- a man who gives you the total creeps, a man with a straggly beard and funny look in his eyes, and you're convinced he'll do whatever he wants with your body, and nobody is around to rescue you. Fighting him off is not an option because he's three feet taller and 150 pounds heavier than you.
How would you feel?
Related info: Click HERE - Three parents say why they never forced their child to sit in Santa Claus's lap.
Published by Jillita Horton
Freelance writer for fitness print magazines and fitness Web sites; ghost writer for fitness Web sites View profile
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3 Comments
Post a CommentDave,
I think they end up hating their parents, not Santa Claus. ??
Wow, great article. I agree 100% with the whole power struggle. How people go through stuff but then duplicate the same thing to the next generation. It's sad how these things pass down. Great article! Hopefully, more parents will communicate with their children on whether the children want o see Santa. Then the poor man in the red suit will hav an easier work day because he won't hav to be in the middle of an awful power struggle. I have a question, Jillita. What percentage of the kids forced to sit on Santa end up hating Santa Claus? I wonder if there is a connection.
Wow, awesome article. I can't imagine forcing a child to sit with Santa, Easter Bunny or any stranger.