With the arrival of December also comes stress and scrambling from parents who want to give their kids the best Elf on the Shelf experience for the holidays.
Any parent who participates in the Elf on the Shelf tradition knows that feeling of getting to the end of an exhausting day and panicking while trying to come up with an idea of what to do with the doll for the following morning.
For those unfamiliar with the holiday tradition, an elf doll that is believed to have the ability to report children's behavior back to Santa moves around a family's home (with the help of parents) each night leading up to Christmas. The concept was first introduced by the 2005 book "The Elf on the Shelf: A Christmas Tradition."
READ MORE: 25 Creepy Vintage Christmas Ornaments That Will Seriously Keep You

NewsTalk 1280

Law & Crime
AlterNet
WCPO 9
News 5 Cleveland
Daily Voice
NBC News
Sturgis Journal
Newsweek Top