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AIBU?

to be confused about the tooth fairy?

45 replies

StealthPolarBear · 08/09/2011 22:45

DS is 4. Am I rihgt in thinking that in a couple f years he is likely to lose his first baby tooth? Surely by then he'll be a bit old for the tooth fairy - will he not get teased at school? Is there not a really small window where they truly believe?

OP posts:
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aldiwhore · 08/09/2011 23:26

I didn't question whether the loo brush was new, I was too busy being horrified at my logistic's mananager dad in MY FUCKING TUTU!!!! I'm guessing it wasn't new.

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OvO · 08/09/2011 23:27

That is so so naaaasty, Spangled. I love it! Grin

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Rollergirl1 · 08/09/2011 23:28

Stealth: I have just delivered coinage in exchange for the tooth. DH and I argued. We had agreed on £2. I wanted to leave a £2 coin instead of the 2 £1 coins that DH handed me. He said wtf does it matter. I said that the tooth fairy would be weighed down flying with too many £1 coins...

I think I just need to go to bed now.

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SpangledPandemonium · 08/09/2011 23:29

Not the first tooth though. She leaves that as a keepsake. Not because she forgot to take it away, you understand.

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Rollergirl1 · 08/09/2011 23:31

Aldi: Better he wearing your tutu then had his own, no? Grin

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aldiwhore · 08/09/2011 23:37

True true rollergirl

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Underconstruction · 09/09/2011 13:30

A letter from the toothfairy adds to the magic. Though sadly in our house the toothfairy lost interest after the first brilliantly written and very funny letter. For the second tooth there was no letter and DD1 was most upset.

We'd moved house by the third tooth and the fairy here uses a proforma "thank you for you front/back top/bottom tooth in excellent/good/poor/bad condition" etc with a quick personal note added - a bit easier to get the toothfairy to do that much. Not sure he'll ever wear a tutu though (and I'm quite sure I'm happy about that).

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PigeonPie · 09/09/2011 13:34

I have decided I am definitely not doing the letter thing. My DSis did this with her two and ended up writing letters at silly times of the night because she was out that evening or something else had happened and I really don't want to get into that sort of hype.

Having said that, both the letters the children wrote and the ones that the fairy wrote would make a fantastic little book as she was very funny.

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ripstheirthroatoutliveupstairs · 09/09/2011 13:51

I only have one DD so being the tooth fairy was simple. DD honestly believed but was a bit miffed that Erin got a letter from her fairy.
I went to a card shop, got a length of purple gauzy ribbon, some gold thread and some teeny tiny star, a bit of purple paper and a gold pen. It took me hours to write the letter and stitch the bag.
DD was upset because Erin's letter had footprints on it.
I did tell my DD that Father Christmas wasn't real last year. She was almost 10 and we were moving to England.
Once she had stopped crying she said 'you'll be telling me the tooth fairy doesn't exist next'.

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YouHaveNoPowerOverMe · 09/09/2011 14:03

What tooth fairy?

I have it on good authority that the tooth fairy died when I was 6yrs old. So, erm..... 19yrs ago!


Father Christmas was drunk on sherry and crashed his sleigh into a tree killing himself. The tooth fairy (who lives in the tree) ad the Easter Bunny (lived under the tree Hmm ) also died in this tragic accident!

It must be true.... My dad wouldn't have lied to me would he?? Sad

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TrillianAstra · 09/09/2011 14:36

The tooth fairy wouldn't be weighed down - two £1 coins weigh the same as a £2 coin!

(I definitely didn't believe in Father Christmas by the time I started losing teeth, but I am apparently cynical and lacking in magic)

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SpangledPandemonium · 09/09/2011 14:47

The tooth fairy sells surplus packs containing little notes, a charm and a bag on ebay. I suppose there's not the money in teeth that there used to be

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randommoment · 09/09/2011 16:07

I think they've guessed about the tooth fairy, and FC too, but only in the last year or so. (DDs are 12) Best advice is make them put the tooth, or stocking in FC's case SOMEWHERE OUTSIDE THEIR BEDROOM. The little angels who could sleep through WW3 going off become hyper sensitive to sound and it is very dull waiting until 2 a.m. on a school night or Christmas Eve for them to be so out cold that you can creep in and out without being caught.

I'm deeply confused by aldiwhore's dad. Was it his own idea? Or did your mum put him up to it?

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whatdoiknowanyway · 09/09/2011 16:08

My daughter was 7 and lost a tooth just after school one afternoon. I had picked her up from school but then had to hand over to her dad as I was going to Denmark on business. I reminded him not to forget the tooth fairy was coming and then set out for the airport.

Next day a distraught 7yr old was told by her father that the tooth fairy hadn't come because she had a big backlog of teeth to see to (he forgot of course).

She went in to school and told her more worldly wise friends what had happened. they said 'told you it was your mum', she said' no mum is in Denmark' and they basically said - 'work it out, the one time your mum is not there what happens?'

There was the domino effect after that... Easter Bunny, Father Christmas all gone although she did have a lovely time helping with the fantasy for her younger sister.

Anyway, ever since then in our family we may not be sure where Father Christmas lives but we KNOW the Tooth Fairy lives in Denmark!

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DontCallMeBaby · 09/09/2011 16:42

One of the TAs in either Yr R or 1 had DD's class making Santa traps - things with bells or something on that would alert the sleeping child to Santa's ingress ... I mean?! What?! Fortunately the same horror of Strange Person entering the bedroom at night that caused DD to be glad about the tooth fairy not existing also means she leaves her stocking outside the door. Teeth still go under the pillow, but that's okay as she knows it's me, plus will sleep through a remarkable amount of furtling about.

We managed to maintain the belief is Santa all the way through February (told Tooth Fairy is not real) to December (really quite expensive Christmas holiday to Lapland). She suspects though.

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quirrelquarrel · 09/09/2011 17:41

I had the tooth mouse. My mum used to write me little notes to go with the money and paint paw prints on...I liked those more than the money, which I didn't really use until a few years later.

I think I always knew it was her (esp. when they said things like, "and be sure to be quiet in the morning and not wake Mum up" and "I've given your tooth to her for safekeeping" !), but you don't really make a big fuss of that kind thing when you're little. I don't remember saying thank you anyway.

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Megfox · 09/09/2011 17:43

Just wait till you see your last baby LEAVING school.....! That's a real reminder of how old YOU are.....!

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carabos · 09/09/2011 18:16

IME no-one believes in the Tooth Fairy. Kids go along with it because its fun and they get the money. Parents go along with it because its a fun thing to do with the kids. The Fairy (whether male or female) is widely known and understood to be an incompetent drunk. Santa is a different matter Wink.

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wearymum73 · 09/09/2011 19:54

The tooth fairy forgot to come to my DS on his 4th tooth. The next morning it was really really windy...so he was told that tooth fairy's can't fly when its to windy!
I even was pointing out that the birds couldn't fly in the morning, they kept on getting blown backwards!!
So he checks now how windy it is when he loses a tooth to see if the tooth fairy can come :-)

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imogengladheart · 09/09/2011 20:47

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