Fast forward 25 years to the trick-or-treat careers of my own children. I would stay home and dole out the fun size candy to the neighborhood kids, and spouse would take our kids out. They would get half-way down the street before exhaustion set in. Spouse would end up carrying one or both of them. Long driveways were judged not worthy of the trek. By now Halloween candy had to be checked carefully before consumption, and could also be xrayed at the fire station. The children would arrive home and get a burst of energy as they came up the driveway, and once inside, the candy would all be dumped on the (orange and quite ugly) living room rug (it was the '70s...). Even a not yet two year old knew the drill. Dumping the candy was beneficial to all parties. The kids were astounded at all the candy that was before them, imagining eating every bit of it. Spouse and I took the opportunity to examine wrappers and toss anything suspicious, while simultaneously checking inventory of what we wanted for ourselves. Those were good times.
Fast forward another 25 years; okay, 30 years. The kids are now married, living far and even farther away. Our sweet little grandson is too little for trick-or-treating. Can't start working on the Halloween tooth decay process until there are actually teeth. So it's just spouse and me and the cat. The cat hates the doorbell and strangers stomping on the porch. And really, we do have to be kind to our animals. This year spouse and I chose the Halloween candy together. If left alone, I will buy awful non-chocolate candy, like jolly ranchers and fruity flavored candy that is easy (for me) to pass up, but appeals to kids. I know because I see them eat it up like, well, candy, in the office where I work. Anyway, this year we got Milky Way, Three Musketeers, Butterfinger, Twix, and M&Ms, all fun sizes. We got approximately 120 pieces of candy, and as we had over 110 tricksters last year, I hoped we would have enough.
Halloween night arrived, and it was dark by 6:00. This is when my "experiment" began to take shape. I peeked through the curtains and noted the houses with outside lights on; basically everyone but us. Okay, I thought, why rush into this? Let's pull the shades in the front rooms, continue watching the "Murder She Wrote" marathon, and see what happens. As soon as an intrepid child ventured to the front door and rang the bell, I would leap into action, turning on all the outside lights, whipping open the front door, and graciously dole out candy with as genuine a smile as I could force. I know how much little children look forward to getting into costumes and getting candy, and I enjoy seeing the little ones who can't yet enunciate "Trick or Treat". The things I do not enjoy about Halloween are the children who are six feet tall, possibly old enough to drive, the hay wagon that makes its appearance every year in our neighborhood carrying dozens of children, the giant SUVs that slowly cruise the neighborhood dropping the kids periodically to run up driveways, and what I especially don't like to see are kids coming from two towns away, as evidenced by the names on their football jerseys. We don't have 120 kids in this neighborhood, yet 120 kids appear once a year to terrorize the cat
If it was Christmas, I would be a Scrooge.
You'll have to excuse me now. There is a bowl of delicious candy calling my name. "Humbug! Oh, Humbug!"
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