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Halloween is not a holiday. It is considered a âcelebrationâ. It is NOT a holiday. Does anyone get the day off, or holiday pay for it? Didnât think so.
While at it, they should move Christmas to the third Saturday in December.That way, the non-Christians wonât need to take the entire week off because it was âChristmasâ.The Christians could celebrate the religious aspect of Christmas on Dec. 25 as is traditional.
I refer to it as the âholiday eating seasonâ. It starts a couple of weeks before Halloween, when I have to taste-test the candy for poison, and runs until after all the Super Bowl leftovers have been consumed. And hits every day in between, because when Iâm on a roll, you know âŠ
Yep. I spend all spring and summer trying to cut weight. Then we go to Hershey PA in early October, then Halloween, then Thanksgiving, then Christmas, all with uncooperative weather and darkness cutting into bicycling time.
It happens once in a while, and it happened just now: This one doesnât ring so true. Another year, another town, it might have been dead-on accurate. Iâve seen it. Adults have, indeed, borrowed Halloween from the kids, tried it on, and found it fit well enough to hoard the good stuff and change the format. Parties, specialty drinks, elaborate costumes, and massive seasonal pop-ups in abandoned big-box stores would crowd out homemade, creative costumes and excited, high-energy trick-or-treating on foot.
But not this year, not where I am. The weather was perfect. There was a nice crackle to the air, but no rain and no wind and no air so cold the costumes had to be covered up with an insulation layer. There was energy, there was good, clean fun, there were creative costumes. There were grown-ups, too, but in the background, adding to the holiday, not usurping it. Supervising from a distance, keeping kids safe, reminding ghouls to say thank you, carrying home the young and worn out. Some in costumes, some in terrific costumes, all meant to join, not to upstage.
And there were a lot. My treat stash was dwindling, threatening to treat-bankrupt me if I didnât do something. So I had the best idea Iâve had in a long time. I apologized to the dog and grabbed her box of Milk Bones and added a bunch of those to the mix. Kids would do a double-take, see the joke, then see opportunity. âCan I take one home to my dog?â Absolutely. And the Milk Bones started going as fast as the candy. Iâll be adding Milk Bones to the treat bowl from here on in, even if itâs not buy-one-get-one-half-off at the CVS.
Life was good. As was whatever the undead and ghostly were living.
So, not meaning to sound all PC or anything, but some of us adults still celebrate it as Samhain; one of my favorite sabbats, but I agree, not a holiday.
Bilan over 6 years ago
If you really were handing out treats, you wouldnât have put on weight.
danketaz Premium Member over 6 years ago
Be fair, we had Halloween long before you did.
whahoppened over 6 years ago
Just quit playing the âOne for you, one for meâ game.
Kim Metzger Premium Member over 6 years ago
Thereâs a movement afoot to move Halloweâen to the last Saturday of October so it wonât keep happening on work nights and school nights.
asrialfeeple over 6 years ago
I think the weight gain isnât so much from handing out candy as it is from those parties.
ACK! Premium Member over 6 years ago
Grownup Halloween
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2d7tErO1Uo
PoodleGroomer over 6 years ago
Halloween is the training camp for Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Years gluttony.
Kroykali over 6 years ago
Halloween is not a holiday. It is considered a âcelebrationâ. It is NOT a holiday. Does anyone get the day off, or holiday pay for it? Didnât think so.
WCraft over 6 years ago
Preach it little girl! We adults get Thanksgiving.
The Legend of Brandon Sawyer over 6 years ago
yes let move it!
kunddog over 6 years ago
will there be this much discussion on the next holiday?armistice / veterans day
Back_phil over 6 years ago
While at it, they should move Christmas to the third Saturday in December.That way, the non-Christians wonât need to take the entire week off because it was âChristmasâ.The Christians could celebrate the religious aspect of Christmas on Dec. 25 as is traditional.
Spider-UK over 6 years ago
Dude, Halloween is over. You can lose the Morpheus costume already.
Richard S Russell Premium Member over 6 years ago
I refer to it as the âholiday eating seasonâ. It starts a couple of weeks before Halloween, when I have to taste-test the candy for poison, and runs until after all the Super Bowl leftovers have been consumed. And hits every day in between, because when Iâm on a roll, you know âŠ
Seed_drill over 6 years ago
Yep. I spend all spring and summer trying to cut weight. Then we go to Hershey PA in early October, then Halloween, then Thanksgiving, then Christmas, all with uncooperative weather and darkness cutting into bicycling time.
jmp46534 over 6 years ago
Halloween is not a real holiday.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] over 6 years ago
Frazz14 hrs ·
It happens once in a while, and it happened just now: This one doesnât ring so true. Another year, another town, it might have been dead-on accurate. Iâve seen it. Adults have, indeed, borrowed Halloween from the kids, tried it on, and found it fit well enough to hoard the good stuff and change the format. Parties, specialty drinks, elaborate costumes, and massive seasonal pop-ups in abandoned big-box stores would crowd out homemade, creative costumes and excited, high-energy trick-or-treating on foot.
But not this year, not where I am. The weather was perfect. There was a nice crackle to the air, but no rain and no wind and no air so cold the costumes had to be covered up with an insulation layer. There was energy, there was good, clean fun, there were creative costumes. There were grown-ups, too, but in the background, adding to the holiday, not usurping it. Supervising from a distance, keeping kids safe, reminding ghouls to say thank you, carrying home the young and worn out. Some in costumes, some in terrific costumes, all meant to join, not to upstage.
And there were a lot. My treat stash was dwindling, threatening to treat-bankrupt me if I didnât do something. So I had the best idea Iâve had in a long time. I apologized to the dog and grabbed her box of Milk Bones and added a bunch of those to the mix. Kids would do a double-take, see the joke, then see opportunity. âCan I take one home to my dog?â Absolutely. And the Milk Bones started going as fast as the candy. Iâll be adding Milk Bones to the treat bowl from here on in, even if itâs not buy-one-get-one-half-off at the CVS.
Life was good. As was whatever the undead and ghostly were living.
childe_of_pan over 6 years ago
So, not meaning to sound all PC or anything, but some of us adults still celebrate it as Samhain; one of my favorite sabbats, but I agree, not a holiday.
fuzzbucket Premium Member over 6 years ago
Parents have always liked candy.