i think that you should tell them that santa and ect are real because that will make then use their imagination more and when they are teens they wont be the kids that hate their parents and refuse to mske contact with them. that's why you should tell them that.
No, he's right up there with the Easter bunny and the tooth fairy. It's like telling Christians that God doesn't exist, you just don't do it.
The Easter bunny`s name is..... Peter Cottontail
well for your information the Easter bunny is real and if u don't bielieve me who come through your house with a Easter basket without making no noise and it being signed Easter bunny and if u still don't bielieve me look at the signature and have your parent right ''Easter bunny'' and if it is not the same i just proved u wrong
The Easter bunny is sleeping and waiting for next Easter to come out and play with kids.
Well, I got it for Easter (I am still a kid - 10), and since the Easter Bunny is not real, apparently you can get it. Well, I got it for Easter (I am still a kid - 10), and since the Easter Bunny is not real, apparently you can get it.
Right. It is the Holy Week or week before Easter.
Yes, they rent a cabin next to Bigfoot's house and are right down the street from the Easter bunny.
It does not live there, it comes from Alsace
Bunnies are special on Easter because they symbolize new life, which is what Spring is about. It has been a tradition to have an Easter bunny and that is also why bunnies are so important - they keep up the tradition. Also, according to folklore, rabbits layed the eggs that the kids picked up, so without the Easter bunny, there would not be any story behind where the eggs come from. More generally, actually bunnies are special because the whole Easter bunny tradition is focused around them.
Santa Claus is an important part of childhood: Carleton Kendrick, Ed.M., LCSW believes that "all children have the right to be fascinated and enchanted by the nurturing, age-old myths and fables of their culture. Santa Claus, and yes, the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy engage a young child's sense of wonder." He implies in his essay that parents should originally teach their children that Santa exists. He suggests that when the children develop doubts about the reality of Santa, that the parents refrain from admitting the truth. Rather, they should stand by to support their kids when his/her "fantasies and myths grudgingly give way to more mature, confusing realities." 3
The Easter bunny probably has its origins in pre-Christian folklore and religion. Springtime was associated with the bringing forth of life and both hares and eggs are fertility symbols. Starting in Germany, Christianity integrated these symbols. Luring Lent the old laws of fasting forbade not only the eating of meat but also of any animal product such as eggs. Receiving eggs at Easter was therefore a treat, as they had been sorely missed during the fast. The concept of a bunny hiding eggs is a euphemism for a hare that lays eggs, which is the older tradition. The idea that hares lay eggs is an old piece of European folklore; farmers in the field would startle hares and then come across plovers' nests that looked just the right size for a hare. This custom of the Easter Bunny (literary translated, Easter Hare) was popularized by German Protestant immigrants in the 18th century in America. Though they did not observe Lent, for this was a Catholic practice, they nonetheless wished to keep the Easter traditions and taught that good boys and girls, if they should make inviting nests with their caps and bonnets on Easter eve, would find them replete with eggs on Easter morn, having been laid there by the Easter Bunny.
Miracle is the right answer