“Seeing
is believing, but sometimes the most real things in the world are the things we
can't see.”
I remember the day I asked my mom if Santa Clause was
real. I was in third grade. I remember I cried and when Christmas came around
it became pretty cool to see all the gifts set up and what my parents’ and grandparents’
process was with the gifts. Even though I did not believe Santa was real I did
and still believe in the spirit of Santa. I like the story of Santa Clause and I
like to see little kids get all excited for Santa, it is adorable. If I hear a
kid under the age of eight does not believe in Santa or that their parents are
cruel and ruined their childhood by telling them Santa is not real. I even feel
bad when the kids start to doubt there is a Santa. It hurts to see some
innocence is gone in little kids who do not believe in or have doubt about
Santa.
For the past eleven years I have gone without seeing The Polar Express. My family is obsessed
with The Polar Express as a story and as an actual model train (my dad has a
pretty awesome train display at Christmas time. He has the model of the Polar
Express and several cars for it). Every Christmas they watch The Polar Express at least four times. In
all the times my family has watched the movie I never sat down to watch it.
This Christmas I decided to finally watch The
Polar Express and I loved it.
A little boy on does not know if he believes in Santa
anymore. He does not really believe in adventure anymore either. On Christmas night
he hears a sound from outside. When he goes to investigate he sees a train pull
up in front of his house. The train is the magical Polar Express traveling to
the North Pole to see Santa before he leaves to deliver presents.
On the Pole Express the boy comes into unimaginable
adventures such as the train falling onto a frozen body of water and not
falling in, the train getting out of control and almost crashing, and walking
across the roof of the trains with a homeless man.
Once they reach the North Pole the boy and another boy
and a girl happen to by accident get into Santa’s workshop. All the elves are
gone out of the workshop and the remnants of their hard work is evident. At the
end of their journey through the workshop the three children come into the town
square where everyone is waiting for Santa. A few of the elves come out with
strands of bells for the reindeers to wear on their nights’ journey. The entire
crowd goes crazy when the bells come out including the girl. She keeps asking
the boy if he can hear the bells. Since the boy has his doubts about Santa and
does not really believe in him the boy cannot hear the bells.
Santa comes out to his sleigh. Every year Santa picks one
of the children who have traveled on the Polar Express to be the first child to
receive the first gift of Christmas. Santa chooses the boy. When Santa asks the
boy he wants he whispers a bell. The boy can now hear the bell because he has
seen the real Santa.
Back home on the Polar Express the boy realizes he has
lost his bell due to a hole in his robe pocket. Fortunately, he wakes up the
next morning to find the bell under his tree. Him and his younger sister can
hear the bell but their parents cannot because they do not believe in Santa.
I loved The Polar
Express. I felt so bad for the boy that he was not sure if Santa was real
but I was so happy that he did believe and still believed even when he was
older. I think it was a movie I needed
to see. For the past few years I had either been in school or in a job I totally
hate or both and I was miserable. I actually felt depressed around Christmas
time. I forgot that Christmas was supposed to be fun and warm and about feeling
like a little kid in a way. I felt so much better after watching The Polar Express. I feel more in the Christmas
spirit and mood. And I definitely believe in the spirit of Santa a lot more!
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