I’m relieved to have survived another Halloween. I’m a
Halloween scrooge and I don’t care who knows it. Surely my quarrel with
Halloween has roots in trauma I experienced as a child from this holiday;
trauma that has nothing to do with the undead and everything to do with myopia.
I am comically nearsighted and, as a child, wore glasses with lenses thick
enough to burn bugs. I have had contact lenses since the age of 16, but during
my trick-or-treating years, I wore glasses. It doesn’t require rocket science
to understand that when you put a plastic Halloween mask over a pair of
glasses, they fog up. For this reason, I spent many a Halloween night stumbling
over lawn furniture, falling in birdbaths, arguing with garden gnomes, and
attempting to hack my way out of labyrinthine hedges and shrubbery with a
plastic fairy wand. As my friends with 20/20 vision leapt joyously down the
street, I was left in the dust extricating myself from the obstacle course of
yard accoutrements and crawling through petunia beds retrieving my candy, which
had spilled.
It took me years to wise up and wear costumes that did not
require a mask. I’m not sure why I bothered to trick-or-treat anyway because I
got to keep very little of my candy. One of my brothers has Celiac, and in
order not to traumatize him alone with the unfairness of not being able to eat
most of the loot we hauled in, my mother traumatized all three of us by
restricting us to the same candy that my brother could eat, namely pure
chocolate. So when we got home with our bulging bags, we poured the full
colorful array of candy out on the kitchen table, separated the paltry few pure
chocolate items from every other blessed treat, and got to keep that and that
alone. My mother took our discarded candy to the local children’s
rehabilitation center and gave it to the bedridden children who couldn’t go trick-or-treating.
Now, all these years later, I appreciate my mother’s beautiful altruism and her
brilliant system for preventing her own children from ingesting pounds of toxic
junk. But as a child, I could not get on board with the good deed of treating
all the little children at the rehab center to my hard-earned candy. I wonder
how the nurses felt about Mom’s kindness since they had to deal with all those
children jacked up on sugar who were stuck in bed. You can only play so many
games of Parcheesi.
These days, as a nutritionist, I know that sugar is the
devil’s brew, one of the most toxic substances in the universe, in the same
league with radioactive waste and tweets from the Tyrannosaurus in the White
House. Halloween is my personal nightmare on Elm St. When my children came home
with their candy, I told them to throw out everything they didn’t like. “It’s
not food,” I told them. “It’s garbage, so if you don’t like that kind of candy
throw it away.” They sat at the kitchen table with a trash can and discarded at
least half the loot because it was stuff they didn’t like. For a few years,
when they were very little, I got away with telling them to choose a small
selection to keep and that the rest was going to disappear to appease the candy
ghost who would come during the night and look for candy to snatch instead of
snatching little children. I managed to pare the stash down to a dull roar that
way. But that didn’t last long because my children quickly figured out there’s
no such thing as a candy ghost. They each had a bag of goodies and every
evening after dinner for weeks they chose something for dessert. I couldn’t
wait for those bags to dwindle. Unfortunately nothing keeps like sugar. That’s
probably why dinosaurs had such bad teeth. Thousands of years from now, when
humans have become extinct, candy will rule the Earth.
For a few years I handed out toothbrushes to
trick-or-treaters. They looked somewhat confused. Only I could turn Halloween
into a dental holiday. One year I gave out tangerines. I have a friend who
worked as a doctor in a low-income community and she told me that she gave out
condoms to all the teenagers who came trick-or-treating at her house. (I hope
the teens didn’t try to eat them.)
The fact that I don’t like dressing up in a costume
definitely poses a serious stumbling block for me when it comes to surviving
Halloween. Weird and unfamiliar clothing makes me uncomfortable and self-conscious.
I can never come up with good costume ideas anyway. My costuming efforts are
too obscure for others to understand. One year I dressed in green and went as
chlorophyll. When I told people what I was, they looked perplexed. One guy
asked me if that’s an energy drink. I told him plants use it to conduct
photosynthesis. He excused himself to talk to a woman in a revealing bodice
about their favorite King Kong movies. It creeps me out to see other people
looking strange in their get-ups. Too hallucinogenic.
The final nail in the Halloween coffin for me is that scary
things actually scare me. I can’t watch horror movies because they give me
nightmares. I can’t even watch normal movies with violence and torture in them.
I hid under the table whenever the Wicked Witch of the West appeared in The Wizard of Oz, until I was eleven
years old. My daughter watched every
minute of that film at the age of two and laughed her head off (not literally).
She couldn’t figure out why her mom cowered behind the couch whenever the
flying monkeys appeared. I went to see the 1978 remake of The Invasion of the Body Snatchers because it was filmed in San Francisco
and a lot of people I knew in the tech theater biz worked on the sets. Big
mistake. I spent almost the entire film hiding my face in my husband’s shoulder
and asking him what was happening. Some guy behind us finally told me in
exasperation, “Just look at it, lady.” I had nightmares for weeks from listening
to the soundtrack.
I don’t see the humor in fake blood and gore. It looks real to
me. Zombies terrify me and I can’t understand what everyone else thinks is so
funny about beyond-dead creatures. Space aliens better look benign because if
they look like inside-out people then I am so not watching. When someone comes
to my door with a pretend axe in their skull and fake blood dripping down, I
run screaming to hide under the bed, even if it’s a fourth-grader and the fake
blood looks like congealed BBQ sauce. Even if it actually is BBQ sauce. Even if
it’s organic BBQ sauce. I don’t mind the fairy princesses and bumblebees, but
the ghouls and serial killers terrify me. Masks creep me out. So if you come to
my house on Halloween, you will find all the lights out. Perhaps a small
pumpkin will grace my front porch; uncarved and still edible, later to be made
into a pie sweetened with honey (not the evil-demon sugar). I will be nowhere
in sight. Life is already scary enough, and getting scarier by the minute,
without purposely finding more ways for us to scare ourselves. My costume for
this year? Bacteria. Invisible to the naked eye. (Not an energy drink FYI.)
Benign picture. Not scary.
2 comments:
I'm with you on the Wizard of Oz, I used to leave the room and go find my mom in the kitchen to chat every time the cackle started. My memories are of my older brother negotiating with us younger sisters so that we ended up with lollipops and he had all the reese peanut butter cups. As an adult, I enjoyed making costumes for the kids. It always took three or four times longer than I planned. However, the sight of Noah running around the house for weeks in his cozy golden retriever costume is a lovely memory.
I will concede that I love that you made costumes for your children and that Noah loved his so much that he wore it long afterward. I wonder how many families still make homemade costumes these days. What a sweet old-fashioned thing to do.
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