Itโs Halloween!โone of my least favorite holidays of the year. I know that offends many people, but so be it. Still, the onset of Halloween brings back memoriesโmany of them religion and church related. Maybe thatโs why I donโt like the holiday!
As a 63-year-old guy with no small children in my life, I donโt do Halloween. Often Jeanne and I celebrate the day by goingย to a late afternoon movie, followed by dinner, so we can be conveniently away during whatever time the parental units deem it safe for the children to be trick-or-treating. I know that I sound like a Halloween Grinch, and thereโs a certain amount of truth to that. I think Halloween is a generally useless and stupid holiday, although I participated in it fully in my youth and faithfully put in my time as a co-organizer of trick-or-treating in my house when my sons were young. Iโve been seeing Halloween stuff in stores since August and will be glad when today is over so miles of shelves can be cleared for the display of Christmas stuff two months before the day. Not. But thinking about Halloween puts me in a reminiscent mood about both persons and times long gone.
In rural Vermont, there was no walking from house to house for trick-or-treating. Our closest neighbors were at least a half mile away; accordingly, my mother logged 20-30 miles of driving every October 31 as my brother and I filled a grocery bag each with an amazing haul. This was long before the scares of razor blades and poison in Halloween treatsโwe collected unwrapped caramel apples and popcorn balls, maple sugar candy before it went on the market, freshly baked pastries, and more. People who gave only a candy bar or a little bag of candy corn were losers. Our haul filled several large bowls at home; despite my motherโs generally futile attempts at rationing, the Halloween proceeds usually lasted until close to Christmas.
Two unrelated issues caused the Halloweens of my youth to be fraught with cognitive dissonance. First, Halloween was my motherโs birthday. My mother was an โeveryone else firstโ person by nature, and my brother and I took full advantage of her deference to all as the day was all about us rather than her. Iโm having a difficult time scrounging up any memories of celebrating her natal day, a cake, a present, anythingโmy brother and I were selfish little bastards, apparently. Second, I had a sneaking suspicion that observing Halloween each year was putting me on the fast track to hell.
We regularly heard at Calvary Baptist Church, where we spent most of every Sunday and Wednesday evening, that Halloween was the devilโs holiday, that participating in an evil holiday that celebrated pagans and demons and witches was a slap in Jesusโ face, and so on. But I was never worried, because my motherโa very devout conservative Baptistโwas even more dedicated to common sense and her sons having as much of a normal childhood preacherโs kidsย could have. So we did Halloween, but we did not trick-or-treat at the houses of anyone who went to our church.
It may be due to his usually being on the road during the fall, but I have only one Halloween memory related to my fatherโit was the year that the communists tried to take the holiday over. In the middle of October during one of my early years in schoolโprobably second or third gradeโthe teacher announced a new plan for trick-or-treating. Instead of gathering the usual tonnage of candy, this year we were asked to โTrick-or-Treat for UNICEF,โ hitting people up for money instead of sweets, money that would be sent to help children in need around the world. In art class we made boxes out of pint milk containers to hold the money; there would be a blow-out party (with candy, presumably) at school in the evening where we would turn in the proceeds. I dutifully made the container and innocently reported the new twist on Halloween to my parents at home.
Dad went ballistic. I was too young to know much about politics, but I discovered during my fatherโs rant that among other things, โTrick-or-Treat for UNICEFโ was a sign of creeping socialism as well as the UNโs ungodly push toward one world government, and a sure prophetic glimmer of the beast from the Book of Revelation. For all we knew, they might be imprinting a โ666โ on us when we brought in our money on Halloween evening. Trick-or-treating for UNICEF was apparently more ungodly than taking โChristโ out of โChristmas.โ Needless to say, that year we trick-or-treated for ourselves as was our custom and did not go to the party.
If I needed such evidence, I became fully aware of just how much the world had changed the first time I encountered Halloween in a city. Halloween 1988 found Jeanne and me with my nine and six-year-old sons in Milwaukee where I had just started my PhD studies at Marquette University, living on the upper floor of a duplex in a reasonably safe urban neighborhood. As the Monday holiday approached (my memory is not that goodโI just looked it up on Google), newspapers and television newscasters announced that for purposes of safety and community solidarity, trick-or-treating would occur on the previous Sunday afternoon, October 30, from 3:00-5:00 PM.
I completely understood the reasoning, given yearly reports of after-dark Halloween mishaps and tragedies across the country, but as Jeanne and I walked a few blocks of our neighborhood with Caleb and Justin in broad daylight along with a hundred or so other families, on a Sunday afternoon that wasnโt even Halloween, I thought โthis is really fโked up.โ What would my childhood Calvary Baptist Church pastor have said about my language and about participating in pagan activities on the Lordโs Day afternoon? Probably not too much, since he regularly spent his fall Sunday afternoons worshiping at the altar of NFL football on television. To each their own pagan activity!