Why Kelly Clarkson told her kids the truth about the Easter bunny

"Sometimes I'm tired of giving credit to non-existent things," shares Clarkson.
Sometimes being a mom can feel like youâre the Wizard of Oz. Youâre behind the curtain pulling all the levers to make stuff happen, but all the credit goes to some fantastic fictional character, not the flesh-and-blood human working hard behind the curtain.
Thatâs why this Easter, Kelly Clarkson pulled back the curtain for her two kids, 4-year-old daughter River and 3-year-old son Remington, and let them know who really left those Easter baskets.
âI kind of just was like, âMommy and daddy did these for you.â I knew my mom always did it,â Clarkson tells People.
She continues: âSometimes Iâm tired of giving credit to non-existent things. Like Iâm very busy, and I took the time to shop at Target and put this all together. I did this â no bunny! They got chocolate, so theyâre fine.â
We totally get it, Kelly.
Moms are the family managers, personal shoppers and magic makers and we often donât get credit for that.
Of course, itâs totally understandable if a parent wants to give credit to the Easter bunny (thatâs a tradition for a lot of families) but it is also pretty cool to see a mother letting her kids know that Mom is the one making all this stuff happen.
Itâs not like Clarkson isnât letting her kids enjoy Easter traditions (they totally had an egg hunt and painted eggs with mama), sheâs just taking credit where itâs due.
Yoga, coffee, easter baskets, egg hunt, breakfast with the little kiddos & hubby, & now Iâm off to the studio to wo⊠https://t.co/rwpHw0rj3v
â Kelly Clarkson (@kellyclarkson)
1555866481.0
And Clarkson isnât the only celeb to take this route. Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard told their daughters, 6-year-old Lincoln and 4-year-old Delta, the truth about Santa.
âThis is going to be very controversial,â Shepard told Us Weekly last year. âI have a fundamental rule that I will never lie to them, which is challenging at times. Our 5-year-old started asking questions like, âWell, this doesnât make sense, and that doesnât make sense.â Iâm like, âYou know what? This is just a fun thing we pretend while itâs Christmas.'â
According to Shepard, this has not diminished the magic of Christmas in their home. âThey love watching movies about Santa, they love talking about Santa,â Shepard told Us. âThey donât think he exists, but theyâre super happy and everythingâs fine.â
The Bell-Shepard kids know that Kristen and Dax are the ones putting the gifts under the tree just like Clarksonâs kids know mom bought the chocolates at Target, and thatâs totally okay. They understand how much effort their parents are putting into making them happy on a special day.
These kids know their parents love them. And that is a powerful, magical truth.
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