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We will be at Southeast Regional Library in Room C

About the Group:

This is a friendly Socratic Café where we explore big ideas through open conversation. No philosophy background is needed, just curiosity, respect, and a willingness to share and listen.

### I. The Myth of Santa and Belief Itself

  1. The Magic We Teach: When we tell children about Santa, are we nurturing their imagination — or teaching them to believe in comforting illusions?
  2. Faith Without Proof: Is believing in Santa so different from belief in other unseen forces — love, hope, or even God?
  3. The Disappearing Magic: Why does the magic of Santa fade as we grow up? Is wonder something that naturally dies, or something we choose to stop feeding?
  4. The Noble Lie: If a lie inspires goodness — joy, generosity, kindness — does it cease to be a lie, or remain one that simply feels right to tell?
  5. The Adult Santa: When we give anonymously or help others in secret, are we, in some sense, becoming the Santa we once believed in?

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## II. The Season of Giving and Desire

6. The Weight of Gifts: When we give presents, are we offering love freely — or trying to buy forgiveness, affection, or belonging?
7. The Gift Unopened: If a gift is never received, does its generosity still exist, or does giving require another to witness it?
8. Gifts of the Heart: Are time, attention, and kindness truer gifts than things we wrap, or do tangible objects carry their own sacred language?
9. The Price of Joy: Has the modern season turned generosity into performance — a ritual we enact to prove our goodness?
10. The Reciprocity Trap: Can a gift really be pure if we expect gratitude in return?

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## III. Wonder, Loneliness, and the Inner Child

11. The Child Within: What happens to the child who once waited for Santa when we stop believing? Do they fade, or live quietly inside us, waiting to feel wonder again?
12. A Solitary Holiday: Why does loneliness feel heavier during the holidays — is it because the lights are brighter, or because the silence around them reveals something in us?
13. Imagination as Sanctuary: Could imagination be a kind of faith — a place that holds meaning even after belief has gone?
14. The Hearth of Memory: Why do we return, year after year, to the same stories, scents, and songs? Are we seeking comfort, or a glimpse of who we once were?
15. The Fragile Spark: How do we keep wonder alive in a world that prefers reason over magic?

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## IV. Society, Morality, and the Holiday Machine

16. The Spirit in Commerce: Can the holiday spirit survive in an age where joy is sold — or has commerce simply become our new cathedral?
17. Tradition and Conformity: When everyone celebrates the same season, does that unity connect us, or quietly pressure us to conform?
18. The Mythmakers: Every culture has its winter story — from Santa to the solstice to the newborn god. What do our myths reveal about what we fear and hope for in the dark?
19. Holiday Masks: What parts of ourselves do we hide behind cheer — and what truths might surface if we stopped pretending everything was merry?
20. The Passing of the Torch: When we grow old enough to stop believing, what do we still owe to the myth? Do we let it go — or protect it for those who still need it?

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