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	<title>Comments on: Merry Christmas</title>
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		<title>By: Jacinta Dean</title>
		<link>http://pattistafford.com/blog/2009/12/merry-christmas/comment-page-1/#comment-138</link>
		<dc:creator>Jacinta Dean</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Jan 2010 10:49:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pattistafford.com/blog/?p=496#comment-138</guid>
		<description>Hi Patti,&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This is a beautiful response. I have a 2 year old that for the first time fell in love with santa this year and the wonder of the lights. She is too young to understand the story, however I can&#039;t wait until next year when she is 3 and her eyes will be brighter even more.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Happy 2010!&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Jacinta :D</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Patti,</p>
<p>This is a beautiful response. I have a 2 year old that for the first time fell in love with santa this year and the wonder of the lights. She is too young to understand the story, however I can&#39;t wait until next year when she is 3 and her eyes will be brighter even more.</p>
<p>Happy 2010!</p>
<p>Jacinta :D</p>
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		<title>By: Jacinta Dean</title>
		<link>http://pattistafford.com/blog/2009/12/merry-christmas/comment-page-1/#comment-107</link>
		<dc:creator>Jacinta Dean</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Jan 2010 03:49:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pattistafford.com/blog/?p=496#comment-107</guid>
		<description>Hi Patti,&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This is a beautiful response. I have a 2 year old that for the first time fell in love with santa this year and the wonder of the lights. She is too young to understand the story, however I can&#039;t wait until next year when she is 3 and her eyes will be brighter even more.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Happy 2010!&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Jacinta :D</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Patti,</p>
<p>This is a beautiful response. I have a 2 year old that for the first time fell in love with santa this year and the wonder of the lights. She is too young to understand the story, however I can&#39;t wait until next year when she is 3 and her eyes will be brighter even more.</p>
<p>Happy 2010!</p>
<p>Jacinta :D</p>
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		<title>By: janetcrotter</title>
		<link>http://pattistafford.com/blog/2009/12/merry-christmas/comment-page-1/#comment-106</link>
		<dc:creator>janetcrotter</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 25 Dec 2009 14:04:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pattistafford.com/blog/?p=496#comment-106</guid>
		<description>Thank you Patti. We at The Studio School in Manhattan, NY are in complete agreement and edcuate children in the house where Virginia pennd her letter.  &lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;We asked our students to consider both Virginia O’Hanlon’s letter to The New York Sun and Francis Church’s response, and write their own answers to Virginia’s question.&lt;br&gt;Here are some of their essays.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Dear Virginia,&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;In this day and age it is very difficult to know what to believe in. If everyone is&lt;br&gt;telling you that there is no Santa Claus, you may feel pressured to agree with them.&lt;br&gt;Virginia, don’t go along with everyone else. Have your own opinions and beliefs! I&lt;br&gt;believe that there is a Santa Claus, not because someone has told me to, but because&lt;br&gt;I am a believer in things unseen. I believe in Santa Claus and mythical creatures and&lt;br&gt;I am not ashamed of that. If you only believe what you see, then you are missing a&lt;br&gt;whole world out there full of wonderful mystical mysteries. Believing is seeing and&lt;br&gt;using your imagination. Whether it is looking up at the sky and seeing a new shape&lt;br&gt;in the clouds or taking an empty space in your mind and seeing a close friend, even&lt;br&gt;Santa Claus.&lt;br&gt;Never stop believing in Santa Claus, Virginia, because if you do you will stop seeing&lt;br&gt;the magic in this world. Grown-ups have become skeptical and are missing all of the&lt;br&gt;wonderful unseen things in this world. Virginia, there is a Santa Claus - I see him in my&lt;br&gt;mind and believe in him in my heart.&lt;br&gt;Much love from your BIG friend,&lt;br&gt;Leila, age 13&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Francis Church is saying that belief is something we all have, but that some of us&lt;br&gt;may not use it. In the part that he says, “You might get your papa to hire men to&lt;br&gt;watch in all the chimneys on Christmas Eve to catch Santa Claus, but even if they did&lt;br&gt;not see Santa Claus coming down, what would that prove?” he is saying that some&lt;br&gt;children need to see, feel, or hear something to believe it’s there. I don’t. Mr. Church&lt;br&gt;means that Santa is not flesh, bones and blood, or the guy in a red suit. He is joy,&lt;br&gt;giving, love, peace and happiness.&lt;br&gt;To me, joy is feeling wind in my face; to me, giving is when I am given respect by an&lt;br&gt;other person or giving respect to someone else; to me love is being heard and cared&lt;br&gt;for; to me peace is being free to move and breathe; and to me happiness is being&lt;br&gt;close to someone and being able to love them. I hope Santa and Christmas live on&lt;br&gt;forever in the hearts of many people.&lt;br&gt;I think this editorial is important to people of all ages because it speaks of love,&lt;br&gt;poetry and hope as being stronger than any man alive.&lt;br&gt;Lucia, age 9&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Virginia O’Hanlon and Francis P. Church took the readers of The Sun newspaper&lt;br&gt;on a journey to think about what Santa Claus means to them personally&lt;br&gt;They made me wonder, does Santa Claus have to be seen, or can he thrive just by&lt;br&gt;being what he is in our hearts? When I was little I went to Macy’s and sat on Santa’s&lt;br&gt;lap and his beard came off. Then I knew that this wasn’t the real Santa but it didn’t&lt;br&gt;matter to me. I still believed that there was a real Santa somewhere and I knew he’d&lt;br&gt;still come on Christmas Eve. I didn’t have to find the real Santa to believe in him.&lt;br&gt;Now, when he comes at Christmas, he still brings new toys and a feeling of joy&lt;br&gt;about my life. He symbolizes the excitement I feel about life and the magic of things&lt;br&gt;that are not logical. Even when I’m a grown up I’ll know that Santa is real because of&lt;br&gt;the feeling of joy I get at Christmas time. I don’t have to see him for him to be real in&lt;br&gt;my heart.&lt;br&gt;Sydney, age 10&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Dear Virginia,&lt;br&gt;Santa Claus isn’t just a man who leaves you presents on Christmas Eve. He&lt;br&gt;is much more than that. Santa symbolizes hope, love, belief, imagination and&lt;br&gt;the true spirit of Christmas. Eventually, we reach an age where we try to find&lt;br&gt;explanations for everything. We lose the excitement in wonder and magic, and&lt;br&gt;become more and more skeptical. Some people, like your friends, stop believing in&lt;br&gt;Santa but don’t let them convince you.&lt;br&gt;I believe that the best things in the world are those that you can’t see and that&lt;br&gt;life would be very boring if there were no imagination, hope or belief in them. You&lt;br&gt;couldn’t play, there would be no books, no toys or any games! We need imagination,&lt;br&gt;hope and belief for all of those things to exist. Without them there would be no&lt;br&gt;creativity or fun. There are many things in science that you can’t see either. You&lt;br&gt;can’t see germs, air, or gravity, but you know that they’re there. Well, it’s the same&lt;br&gt;with Santa. You may not have seen him, but that’s no reason not to believe in him.&lt;br&gt;Your friend,&lt;br&gt;Samuel, age 11&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Santa Claus is as real as you or me. He brings with him the spirit of Christmas, he&lt;br&gt;brings everyone together, and we can feel his effect on us, even if we can’t see him.&lt;br&gt;He resides in our hearts, and in our imaginations. It is a shame that Christmas Eve&lt;br&gt;is the only time people believe he comes to us. Santa Claus is the Christmas Spirit&lt;br&gt;embodied and he inspires those feelings of delight, love, wonder and happiness,&lt;br&gt;which should be part of our lives all year round.&lt;br&gt;We are much too dependent on what we can see, leaving the unseen less&lt;br&gt;accessible to us. Why and how do we believe in love? Can love be seen? Love in&lt;br&gt;the very essence of the word; I don’t know about you but I don’t see it. I feel the&lt;br&gt;effects of love, like I feel the effects of Santa, however I don’t need to see them&lt;br&gt;to believe love is there. If I didn’t trust enough to believe that love was there, an&lt;br&gt;intangible, invisible connection, I would be terribly sad and alone. And that is what&lt;br&gt;I think Mr. Church is saying. We must trust what we cannot see and put our faith in&lt;br&gt;the unknown. If we abandon what is unknown to our senses, how can we truly know&lt;br&gt;anything? And so, I think Mr. Church’s letter is important for everyone to read, so we&lt;br&gt;don’t forget what we don’t forget what we don’t see.&lt;br&gt;Jenan, age 13&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Dear Virginia,&lt;br&gt;I too believe in Santa Claus. Although I am at an age where most adolescents&lt;br&gt;start to become skeptical, I have avoided this as much as I can, and to me Santa&lt;br&gt;Claus is real.&lt;br&gt;What makes me believe in Santa Claus are the feelings of confidence and faith&lt;br&gt;that he gives me. I have confidence in my future, and faith in my abilities. Through&lt;br&gt;my laughter, joy, and belief in the unseen, he is real to me. That is what Mr. Church&lt;br&gt;is trying to convey, not only to you but to everyone of all ages. What would we all&lt;br&gt;do if there were no Santa Claus? He is a beacon that guides us to our bliss and&lt;br&gt;laughter at Christmas time.&lt;br&gt;Believe in things you can’t see. It’s great! It puts our imaginations to work,&lt;br&gt;it leads to discoveries, and most importantly, it may lead to jubilant thoughts!&lt;br&gt;The editorial response you received from Mr. Church is important because he&lt;br&gt;wants us all to know that belief plays a big role in our lives and that by believing&lt;br&gt;we all can be united as one.&lt;br&gt;So remember, Virginia, seeing isn’t always believing, but as long as your&lt;br&gt;feelings are passionate, your beliefs are real.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thank you Patti. We at The Studio School in Manhattan, NY are in complete agreement and edcuate children in the house where Virginia pennd her letter.  </p>
<p>We asked our students to consider both Virginia O’Hanlon’s letter to The New York Sun and Francis Church’s response, and write their own answers to Virginia’s question.<br />Here are some of their essays.</p>
<p>Dear Virginia,</p>
<p>In this day and age it is very difficult to know what to believe in. If everyone is<br />telling you that there is no Santa Claus, you may feel pressured to agree with them.<br />Virginia, don’t go along with everyone else. Have your own opinions and beliefs! I<br />believe that there is a Santa Claus, not because someone has told me to, but because<br />I am a believer in things unseen. I believe in Santa Claus and mythical creatures and<br />I am not ashamed of that. If you only believe what you see, then you are missing a<br />whole world out there full of wonderful mystical mysteries. Believing is seeing and<br />using your imagination. Whether it is looking up at the sky and seeing a new shape<br />in the clouds or taking an empty space in your mind and seeing a close friend, even<br />Santa Claus.<br />Never stop believing in Santa Claus, Virginia, because if you do you will stop seeing<br />the magic in this world. Grown-ups have become skeptical and are missing all of the<br />wonderful unseen things in this world. Virginia, there is a Santa Claus &#8211; I see him in my<br />mind and believe in him in my heart.<br />Much love from your BIG friend,<br />Leila, age 13</p>
<p>Francis Church is saying that belief is something we all have, but that some of us<br />may not use it. In the part that he says, “You might get your papa to hire men to<br />watch in all the chimneys on Christmas Eve to catch Santa Claus, but even if they did<br />not see Santa Claus coming down, what would that prove?” he is saying that some<br />children need to see, feel, or hear something to believe it’s there. I don’t. Mr. Church<br />means that Santa is not flesh, bones and blood, or the guy in a red suit. He is joy,<br />giving, love, peace and happiness.<br />To me, joy is feeling wind in my face; to me, giving is when I am given respect by an<br />other person or giving respect to someone else; to me love is being heard and cared<br />for; to me peace is being free to move and breathe; and to me happiness is being<br />close to someone and being able to love them. I hope Santa and Christmas live on<br />forever in the hearts of many people.<br />I think this editorial is important to people of all ages because it speaks of love,<br />poetry and hope as being stronger than any man alive.<br />Lucia, age 9</p>
<p>Virginia O’Hanlon and Francis P. Church took the readers of The Sun newspaper<br />on a journey to think about what Santa Claus means to them personally<br />They made me wonder, does Santa Claus have to be seen, or can he thrive just by<br />being what he is in our hearts? When I was little I went to Macy’s and sat on Santa’s<br />lap and his beard came off. Then I knew that this wasn’t the real Santa but it didn’t<br />matter to me. I still believed that there was a real Santa somewhere and I knew he’d<br />still come on Christmas Eve. I didn’t have to find the real Santa to believe in him.<br />Now, when he comes at Christmas, he still brings new toys and a feeling of joy<br />about my life. He symbolizes the excitement I feel about life and the magic of things<br />that are not logical. Even when I’m a grown up I’ll know that Santa is real because of<br />the feeling of joy I get at Christmas time. I don’t have to see him for him to be real in<br />my heart.<br />Sydney, age 10</p>
<p>Dear Virginia,<br />Santa Claus isn’t just a man who leaves you presents on Christmas Eve. He<br />is much more than that. Santa symbolizes hope, love, belief, imagination and<br />the true spirit of Christmas. Eventually, we reach an age where we try to find<br />explanations for everything. We lose the excitement in wonder and magic, and<br />become more and more skeptical. Some people, like your friends, stop believing in<br />Santa but don’t let them convince you.<br />I believe that the best things in the world are those that you can’t see and that<br />life would be very boring if there were no imagination, hope or belief in them. You<br />couldn’t play, there would be no books, no toys or any games! We need imagination,<br />hope and belief for all of those things to exist. Without them there would be no<br />creativity or fun. There are many things in science that you can’t see either. You<br />can’t see germs, air, or gravity, but you know that they’re there. Well, it’s the same<br />with Santa. You may not have seen him, but that’s no reason not to believe in him.<br />Your friend,<br />Samuel, age 11</p>
<p>Santa Claus is as real as you or me. He brings with him the spirit of Christmas, he<br />brings everyone together, and we can feel his effect on us, even if we can’t see him.<br />He resides in our hearts, and in our imaginations. It is a shame that Christmas Eve<br />is the only time people believe he comes to us. Santa Claus is the Christmas Spirit<br />embodied and he inspires those feelings of delight, love, wonder and happiness,<br />which should be part of our lives all year round.<br />We are much too dependent on what we can see, leaving the unseen less<br />accessible to us. Why and how do we believe in love? Can love be seen? Love in<br />the very essence of the word; I don’t know about you but I don’t see it. I feel the<br />effects of love, like I feel the effects of Santa, however I don’t need to see them<br />to believe love is there. If I didn’t trust enough to believe that love was there, an<br />intangible, invisible connection, I would be terribly sad and alone. And that is what<br />I think Mr. Church is saying. We must trust what we cannot see and put our faith in<br />the unknown. If we abandon what is unknown to our senses, how can we truly know<br />anything? And so, I think Mr. Church’s letter is important for everyone to read, so we<br />don’t forget what we don’t forget what we don’t see.<br />Jenan, age 13</p>
<p>Dear Virginia,<br />I too believe in Santa Claus. Although I am at an age where most adolescents<br />start to become skeptical, I have avoided this as much as I can, and to me Santa<br />Claus is real.<br />What makes me believe in Santa Claus are the feelings of confidence and faith<br />that he gives me. I have confidence in my future, and faith in my abilities. Through<br />my laughter, joy, and belief in the unseen, he is real to me. That is what Mr. Church<br />is trying to convey, not only to you but to everyone of all ages. What would we all<br />do if there were no Santa Claus? He is a beacon that guides us to our bliss and<br />laughter at Christmas time.<br />Believe in things you can’t see. It’s great! It puts our imaginations to work,<br />it leads to discoveries, and most importantly, it may lead to jubilant thoughts!<br />The editorial response you received from Mr. Church is important because he<br />wants us all to know that belief plays a big role in our lives and that by believing<br />we all can be united as one.<br />So remember, Virginia, seeing isn’t always believing, but as long as your<br />feelings are passionate, your beliefs are real.</p>
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