I remember a little boy who didn’t want to come anywhere near Santa.
He stood back, clinging to the edge of the room, watching carefully.
His body told the story before his words ever could — tight shoulders, cautious eyes, a quiet fear he didn’t yet have language for.
Someone nearby encouraged him.
“Go on. Tell Santa what you want.”
But that wasn’t what he needed.
Santa could read it immediately — not defiance, not disinterest, but fear.
The kind that asks a silent question first: Is it safe?
So Santa didn’t reach for a script.
He didn’t lean forward.
He didn’t insist.
He waited.
He softened his voice.
He noticed what the child was holding.
He spoke slowly, without expectation.
In that pause, the child wasn’t being managed or corrected.
He was being seen.
And something shifted.
Not all at once.
Not dramatically.
But enough.
Enough for the child to take a small step closer.
Enough to stay in the room.
Enough to feel safe.
That moment didn’t look like Christmas Magic to someone waiting for smiles and photos.
But it was.
I’ve spent much of my life teaching.
Sometimes it was computers, back when people were afraid they’d “break something” if they clicked the wrong button.
Sometimes it’s been Christmas Magic, when children aren’t quite sure what to believe — or whether it’s safe to wonder out loud.
The pattern has always been the same.
Before learning — or Magic — can happen, people need to feel safe.
Seen.
Unrushed.
Our visits with children reveal this truth more clearly than almost anything else.
One of the first things we talk about in the Santa Legacy Workshop is this:
Presence comes before answers.
Children don’t need us to rush them into wonder.
They need us to invite it.
When a child asks a question —
or hesitates,
or stays back,
or hides behind a parent —
the most important thing we can offer isn’t information.
It’s attunement.
When we slow down, meet them where they are, and let imagination open naturally, something powerful happens. The child isn’t being managed or reassured — they’re being seen.
That’s where trust forms.
That’s where wonder grows.
Over time, I’ve noticed something else.
For some people, Christmas Magic isn’t just for a season.
It’s a way of showing up.
They’re the ones who notice the quiet children.
Who understand that presence matters more than polish.
Who know that Magic doesn’t come from doing more — it comes from responding with care.
They carry Christmas Magic intentionally —
whether as parents, grandparents, teachers, caregivers, storytellers, or yes, sometimes as Santas, Mrs. Clauses, or other Christmas performers.
They don’t always have words for what they’re doing.
But they know when it matters.
That noticing is what became the spark for spreading Christmas Magic through The Santa Legacy.
Not a performance philosophy.
Not a program built on fear or pressure.
But a way of understanding what children actually need —
and how adults can show up with steadiness, imagination, and heart.
The Santa Legacy Workshop exists because these moments deserve attention.
Not to turn them into formulas.
But to help people recognize them, trust themselves within them, and respond with intention.
Because the truth is, the work doesn’t end on December 25.
And neither does the calling to carry Christmas Magic.
If this story feels familiar —
if you’ve ever slowed down for a child who needed something different —
if you’ve felt that quiet responsibility to protect wonder rather than perform it —
I wanted you to know the door is open.
The Santa Legacy Workshop begins January 21 with live, online sessions.
Early-bird pricing for the founding cohort is available through December 31.
You can learn more here:
👉https://thesantalegacy.com/santa-legacy-workshop/
Whether you join us or simply carry this awareness into the year ahead, I’m grateful you’re here.
Because sometimes, the most meaningful Christmas Magic doesn’t look like joy.
Sometimes it looks like patience.
And that matters more than we realize.
— Mrs. Claus

