But why is this so? I don’t have any solid, factual answers, but I can offer one theory. First off, there are photo ops. When a parent has a camera in hand, everything changes. And none more so than around the holidays.
Case in point: story time at the local library.
“Daddy?” he says, and I can feel the fear in his voice as the next Ho-Ho-Ho echoes towards us. Being born in September four years earlier, this is my son’s fifth encounter with the same sound, and I can’t say that I blame him for reacting the way he does.
“It’s okay,” I say, and walk into the main room of the library, the sirens of the shoplifting gates blaring as we move into the children's section.
Now I know that all Santas aren’t Billy Bob Thornton or whoever the maniac was who played the same character in Silent Night, Deadly Night, but there is something off about a lumberjack looking man sporting rouge and wearing nightcaps. But damn does he draw a crowd. And he’s got something working for him to. Ninety-nine percent of the adults lined up to see him are women.
Once again I become tricked that my son actually wants to see this wintry icon. Or maybe I pushed the idea on him. We were there, standing among the others. He didn’t drive himself to the library. He can’t read the flyers advertising Santa’s “visit” to the library, which I later noticed posted to most every light post and pinned to every tack board in town. He can’t say no to the chance of going to a place he loves so much, filled with books and computer games and the opportunity to corral his dad into reading everything within reach. For the most part, he still does what I do, goes where I go. For the most part, he’s still just a baby.
I’m no longer a kid, and most of my youngest memories have been washed away, but I guess I can see the draw to Santa, in one way or another. The beer gutted man with a James Earl Jones voice is promising each kid not only the ability to fly with him in his reindeer guided sleigh but also presents, for the small price of being a good little boy or girl and sitting on his thigh.
In hindsight, though, Rowan probably wasn’t waiting in line just for the guarantee of presents. Sure he might’ve overheard some of the other kids saying that they were going to get everything they asked for because they have been good since the day they were pulled into the world. He was probably watching all of them clog the “reading carpet” in front of Santa, faces we don’t normally see on our usual Friday’s at the library. He could’ve been studying the way they pushed and shoved for position, against their own mothers no less, to get closer to Mr. Claus. Or he might not have noticed any of those things. Maybe he simply wanted to see if the man in the big red suit scared him anymore.
So we waited, not as long as others but not as short as some. Eventually we made it to Santa. My son didn’t sit on his lap. He didn’t even look at him. He sat on a chair next to him, looking at me snapping pictures of him. Santa got mad at me, actually raised his voice a little in opposition when I told him Rowan has always been a little unsure about others like him. Then he handed my son a bag filled with candy, a pencil, and a bookmark, doing so without a smile until the next kid was forced onto his lap.
Rowan led me through the remaining crowd and headed towards the books. I might’ve read a dozen, maybe more, both of us sitting within the outspread arms of a giant panda. He asked me if he was a good boy. I asked him what he thought. He said yes, and then handed me another book.
The same every year.