Seasonal & Holidays
Santa Demystifies Wiggling Down the Chimney in Letter to Boy, 7
Santa also explained he used to enter homes through stoves in a poof of magic dust. But modern furnaces changed everything.
Santa has a special emissary in the Michigan town of Lowell, where thereβs so much holiday spirit it may be in the running for a mention among Americaβs most amazing Christmas towns. (Photo licensed under Wikimedia Creative Commons.)
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Who says Santa doesnβt answer those sans-postage letters with scarcely more than a scribbled North Pole address that kids drop into mailboxes around Thanksgiving time?
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Not 7-year-old Adam Smith of Lowell. He received a response from the mythical β or is he? β creature who makes childrenβs Christmas wishes come true, the Detroit Free Press reports.
And it wasnβt a cursory note acknowledging receipt of the letter and promising a review by overworked elves who have a lot of other childrenβs wishes to consider, too.
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Santa answered specific questions β how he manages to wiggle down chimneys, for example β and some Adam hadnβt asked β like why, in a poof of magic dust, he no longer enters childrenβs homes through the small metal stoves used for home heating way back in time.
Furnaces, it seems, changed everything.
Adamβs mother, Michelle Smith, said she had forgotten her son had written the letter and was more surprised than he was when Santaβs pages-long response showed up in the mail.
So, did Santa really write the letter?
Well, no.
But whoβs to say he didnβt dictate it to the anonymous postal carrier who has been reading and replying to Lowell childrenβs letters to Santa β about 30 a year β since 1993?
βHeβs kindhearted,β Sue Dombrowski, a supervisor with the Lowell post office, said. βHeβs been doing it for years.β
Michelle Smith said the extra effort is greatly aprpeciated.
βFor little kids,β she said, βthis is a huge deal.β
What Is It About Lowell?
If Lowell and Christmas seem to go together in your mind like Santa and kids, it may be because youβre remembering what was maybe the best cop Christmas story ever.
Police officers in Lowell teamed up with a cable network, stopped motorists for minor offenses while the television crew eavesdropped by radio from a big-box store, then gave them gifts instead of tickets.
Who knows, bursting-with-holiday-cheer postal workers and police officers may be enough to land Lowell on the 2015 list of the 17 most-amazing Christmas towns in America compiled by food, drink and all-things-cool arbiter Impulcity.
Two Michigan locations made the list in 2014 β No. 4 Frankenmuth, due mainly to the world-famous Bronnerβs Christmas Wonderland, which offers a sea of decorations so vast that itβs almost a city in itself; and No. 12 Mackinac Island, where scenes of horse-drawn carriages look like they belong on a Currier & Ives teacup. No motorized traffic is allowed there.
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