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The Rural Voice, 2001-12, Page 30THE SANTA SECRET Some secrets may need to be kept a little longer By Jennifer Trewartha not enough. On our way home to Ottawa from a recent visit to Grandma and Grandpa, near Goderich, David announced that he was going to write Santa and ask for a Nintendo 64 game. My husband said, "That's too expensive." About an hour or two and many rolling hills and black and white cows later, David asked, "Mummy, is Santa Claus real?" I pulled out the old standby, "What do you think?", all the while wiggling my eyebrows in alarm at my husband, who apparently doesn't read To tell or not to tell. That is the question on many parents' minds at this time of year. The other night, IT happened. The Santa Claus question. Actually, I thought it had already happened two Christmas's ago. My son, David, then seven, had asked the Santa question (I had just struggled through the other dreaded question ... you know, the S.E.X. one), and I had coyly responded in my best fact -avoiding manner, "What do you think?" Wink, wink, smile, smile. Well, apparently this attempt at Santa education was eyebrows, as no help was forthcoming. Chuck kept his eyes on the road and made no comment, helpful or otherwise. My advice? Don't believe your child when he says, "I really want to know." I said, "No," and went on to explain that Santa was really us and his grandparents and all the other people who love him. Of course, I never dreamed that he didn't already "know about Santa", or I'd have never so baldly said "no". A sniff came from the back seat of 26 THE RURAL VOICE