talulabelle
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2007
- Messages
- 2,535
Until recently after reading about it on the DIS and found there was a whole "Disney culture" here, I never knew that peoples children "believed" in Disney characters. I am sure the librarian that said this to the class was like me and just was teaching a lesson on Fiction and Non-Fiction, which is a very age appropriate lesson for a 9 year old. If she said "give an example of a non-fiction story" and your daughter said "Cinderella" she would be a pretty bad educator and librarian if she didn't correct her and say "No, Cinderella is a fictional story, it is made up, it isn't a real person". I'm sure she was just following her lesson plan, and never in a million years thought she was bursting anyone's bubble. Especially at age 9.
My kids beleived in Santa, and the toothfairy, and the Easter Bunny (although they beleived in the Easter Bunny as a real bunny that we have never seen, they were well aware that the dude in the suit in the mall was fake fake fake and found it creepy without me ever having to tell them.) I understand that type of "magic of childhood" and wanted it to last as long as possible too, but I never knew that there were children who "believed" in Mickey or other story book characters. It never in a million years crossed my mind that kids would buy into it.
My kids beleived in Santa, and the toothfairy, and the Easter Bunny (although they beleived in the Easter Bunny as a real bunny that we have never seen, they were well aware that the dude in the suit in the mall was fake fake fake and found it creepy without me ever having to tell them.) I understand that type of "magic of childhood" and wanted it to last as long as possible too, but I never knew that there were children who "believed" in Mickey or other story book characters. It never in a million years crossed my mind that kids would buy into it.