And Sons Magazine

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An Interview with Kris Kringle

Words John Eldredge
Images Eye of Rie

While on an epic caribou hunt this fall, north of the arctic circle, we followed a curious tip from an old Inuit guide and stumbled upon the North Pole Workshop. There we found The Man himself—Father Christmas—just as warm and inviting as you’d expect, and surprisingly candid. So here it is folks: an And Sons exclusive!


And Sons: Mr. Claus… St. Nick… may we call you Nicolas?

Santa Claus: [Wiping some crumbs off his red coat] That’d be just fine.

AS: Guess this is a pretty busy season of the year for you. Thanks so much for making time for us.

SC: Mmmm… not as busy as you’d expect. Business is down, boys. You've seen the news—a whole lot more folks filling up that Naughty column than there are Nice. Gonna be a light load this year.

AS: Yeah—we noticed that. Forgive us if we seem a little flustered. This is a bit of a childhood dream come true.

SC: Take your time.

AS: There are so many questions we've been dying to ask. Let’s start with something simple: what's your favorite Christmas carol?

SC: I’ve always loved I wonder as I wander. [At this point Santa begins to hum it a little to himself; we wait to interrupt.]

AS: That makes sense. You do do a bit of wandering, don’t you? Which raises the question—how does it happen? How do you cover the whole world in one night?

SC: Wormholes.

AS: Come again?

SC: Anomalies in the space-time continuum. [Looking down at us over his bifocals] Did you boys skip science class?

AS: We’re English majors.

SC: Well, now, that makes sense, doesn’t it? Think FedEx-meets-Star Trek. That should help you grasp it.

AS: Yeah. Umm… well… what's the weirdest thing you’ve seen on a Christmas list?

SC: [Laughing] Oh, ho ho—I’ve seen it all. The Millennium Falcon. Spiderman’s powers. Kids don’t ask for their two front teeth by the way—they’re much more ambitious. One eight year-old boy asked me for the Nimitz-class supercarrier Theodore Roosevelt, fully operational and battle ready. [Chuckling] I thought that was weird.

AS: [We shift in our seat a bit] Heh, heh—that is weird.

SC: [Raises his eyebrows as he looks at us with those twinkling eyes] I see you when you’re sleeping, if you recall.

AS: We would have put it to good use.

SC: Sorry, kid.

AS: That’s okay. Listen, we want to respect your time. Can we go ahead and ask the Big Question—are you for Real, or not?

SC: Well, now that is the $60,000 question, isn’t it?

[There follows a long, awkward silence at this point as St. Nick tamps out his pipe, slowly fills and re-lights it. In the heavy silence we can hear the grandfather clock ticking; the sound of the wind outside; and far-off factory-like noises. We wait for Nicolas to answer.]

SC: I am the Jungian expression of humanity’s subconscious desire for God.

AS: Come again?

SC: I see you waking and sleeping. I know if you’ve been bad or good. They call that omniscience, son. A god-like attribute. Only in me, you see it softened with a longing for benevolence and playfulness. I’m an archetypal yearning for God, trimmed down to manageable size. [Looking down at his belly, which in fact does shake rather like a bowlful of jelly] But not that trimmed down—oh, ho ho!

[Long sigh] Surely you boys remember your T.S. Eliot: “Mankind cannot bear very much reality.” Think of me as…Belief Lite.


And Sons Print Volume 1