The snow fell in slow spirals outside the dimly lit bar, where three men sat around the same scarred oak table they had claimed for nearly a decade.
Every Christmas Eve, without fail, they gathered—not for family, not for faith, but for the impossible question that kept them human.
“How does he do it?” the artist said, brushing paint flecks from his fingers as if they were stardust. “How does one being deliver joy to billions in one night?”
The engineer chuckled, swirling the ice in his glass. “You mean how he could do it. There’s a difference between wonder and logistics.”
The physicist adjusted his glasses, his eyes reflecting the amber light of the bar’s tiny bulbs. “Or perhaps you mean: how could we ever understand it?”
They clinked glasses.
Tradition began.
The Artist’s Theory: The Magic of Belief
The artist leaned forward, voice low and fervent.
“You’re both missing the point. Santa doesn’t deliver gifts because of physics or mechanics—he delivers because he exists where belief still lives. Each child who imagines him gives him form, and that collective imagination becomes his sleigh, his speed, his magic.”
The engineer rolled his eyes. “So you’re saying it’s powered by… dreams?”
“Not dreams—faith,” the artist replied. “Not in a man, but in what he represents. Every painted card, every glowing ornament, every whispered wish is an act of creation. The laws of art and emotion are stronger than any law of thermodynamics.”
The physicist tilted his head, intrigued despite himself.
“You’re saying belief collapses probability into existence—like a kind of human-driven wave function.”
The artist smiled. “Exactly. Magic isn’t the opposite of science. It’s the poetry of it.”
For a moment, all three sat silent, letting that notion settle like dust on candlelight—the idea that wonder itself could move matter.
The Engineer’s Theory: The Machinery of Miracles
The engineer cracked his knuckles and set his glass down.
“Alright, my turn. No offense to your ‘poetry,’ but the only way to deliver that many packages is through an automated system on an impossible scale.”
He began sketching on a napkin—tiny sleighs branching from one great mothership like snowflakes from a storm cloud.
“Imagine a global delivery network built centuries ahead of its time. Millions of drones, each guided by data—weather patterns, children’s locations, behavioral algorithms. The sleigh’s just a symbol. The real Santa is an entire system of precision.”
The artist frowned. “That sounds cold. Heartless.”
“Not heartless,” the engineer said softly. “Efficient. The greatest gift humanity ever built wasn’t the sleigh—it was coordination. Santa isn’t one man. He’s the sum of our capacity to create order out of chaos.”
The physicist smiled faintly. “A machine of goodwill.”
“Exactly,” the engineer said. “A machine that runs not on gears or wires—but on intention. Every parent who wraps a present, every neighbor who donates a coat, they’re all nodes in the network. Each act of kindness becomes an operation in a vast machine that never stops working.”
For a moment, even the artist nodded.
There was something beautiful in the practicality of it—the poetry of precision.
The Physicist’s Theory: The Paradox of Time
When it was his turn, the physicist spoke with the quiet certainty of someone who had seen equations that could unmake worlds.
“You’re both right,” he said. “But you’re both limited by the assumption that time moves forward.”
He drew three lines on his coaster.
“One moment, he’s in New York. Next, Tokyo. But what if time isn’t linear for him? What if his sleigh doesn’t move through time, but across it—like a needle weaving through a tapestry?”
The engineer raised an eyebrow. “A temporal loop?”
“Exactly,” said the physicist. “He delivers gifts in a single eternal instant—a quantum superposition of giving. To us, it appears as one night. To him, it’s… forever.”
The artist whispered, “That’s lonely.”
The physicist nodded, staring into his untouched drink.
“Perhaps. To bring joy to every child, he must live in the stretch between seconds, never aging, never resting. An immortal bound by kindness—not by choice, but by consequence.”
They sat with that thought.
The bar’s jazz faded into silence.
Snow pressed against the windows like quiet applause.
The Farewell
Eventually, the clock struck midnight. The bartender flipped the Closed sign, and the three men stood.
Outside, the world glowed soft and white.
The artist pulled his coat close. “You think he’s out there now?”
The engineer shrugged. “If he is, he’s right on schedule.”
The physicist smiled faintly. “Or maybe he’s always been.”
They stood together for a heartbeat longer—three fragments of human thought, bound by ritual, mystery, and the stubborn need to believe.
The artist extended his hand. “Same time next year?”
The engineer clasped it. “Same bar.”
The physicist joined them, a slight grin forming.
“Same question.”
They parted in three directions—into the falling snow, into the hum of unseen machinery, into the quiet folds of time—each carrying a piece of wonder they couldn’t prove, yet refused to let die.
And somewhere, in that eternal instant between belief and logic, a sleigh bell rang once—clear and bright.
Merry Christmas
Kyle J. Hayes
kylehayesblog.com
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