Trick or Treat!!!!
Halloween conjures visions of jack-o-lanterns, costumes, and
candy! Children’s voices chiming “TRICK
OR TREAT!” never fails to make me smile!
Mom or dad would bring home a big orange pumpkin and we’d
decide if we wanted a smiling face or a scary one – usually I wanted a smile. I remember spreading newspapers out on the
front steps so we wouldn’t make a mess, then daddy would start carving the face
in the pumpkin with a big knife. Mama
would affix a candle to an old mayonnaise jar lid so it would stand level
inside the jack-o-lantern. I loved lighting
the candle to bring our jack-o-lantern to life – and the smell of the candle
scorching the inside of the pumpkin still makes the magic of the season seem
real.
I am fairly certain that my first Halloween costume was a
ghost. I recall my mom tossing a big
white sheet over my head, then letting it settle around my feet. She cautioned me to stand still while she
took a crayon and marked where to cut the eyes.
The 1960 edition of me had a tough time standing still, believe me! But I am sure that I was the scariest ghost
in Peachland!
Over the years, my costumes changed. I really don’t remember all of them, but each
one was homemade. I was a witch one
year, sporting a red wig and black dress.
As a teenager, I recycled an old black suit that my Uncle Buck threw
out, and turned it into a hobo costume.
Through the years, my sister and I took turns wearing the suit, and each
time we’d add more to it. We attached
brightly colored fabric patches here and there, either by sewing or with huge
diaper pins. I added a pair of navy and
orange striped socks, Becky stuck a huge silk flower on the lapel as a
boutonniere. (I find myself wondering if
Becky’s kids still use the hobo costume!)
Living out in the country meant that we got very few
trick-or-treaters at our house. It also
meant that Daddy put us in the car and drove us around to go trick-or-treating
ourselves. One year at my Aunt Georgia’s
house, my cousins Kitty and Dailey met us in the yard with paper plates full of
candies and Uncle Jack said we could take all we could get off the plate. Try as we might, though, we couldn’t pick up
ANY of the candies – what a trick!!
They’d all been glued to the plates!!!
Eventually Aunt Georgia gave us some treats and we all got a big laugh
out of it.
Another neighbor’s older son Tommy rigged up a microphone in
the bushes by their front door. He sat
in an upstairs room where he could look out the window and see us, and called
out our names in a spooky voice as we walked up the sidewalk! My sister Becky was very small, probably
pre-school age, and she talked back to the voice in the bush – nothing scared
her, that’s for sure!
Oh, the candy we’d bring home! Of course there were candy
bars and lollipops, usually an apple, sometimes some gum. But my favorite had to be my Grandma Belle’s
homemade popcorn balls! She heated oil
in the bottom of a heavy pressure cooker, then added the kernels and put the
lid on. Once the first *POP* started,
she’d shake the pan over the burner so the corn wouldn’t scorch. When all the kernels were fluffy and white,
she added a syrupy concoction and formed fist-sized balls of candy-coated
popcorn. To my knowledge she didn’t use
a recipe, and none of us are sure exactly what she put in them, other than
molasses. On Halloween, the popcorn
balls would be wrapped in wax paper. She
continued making them every autumn until she was about 90 years old. Man, what I would give to have one of those
tasty treats today!
So as another October 31 rolls around, and I will light a
candle in a smiling jack-o-lantern. I’ll
watch out for little ghosts, clowns, ballerinas, and lions. And when I get a few minutes, I’ll close my
eyes and pretend I’m once again 4 years old, wearing a scary sheet, and
munching a molasses-covered popcorn ball…
Comments
Thank you for sharing this.Not many trick or treat around where I live but I hope you have many visitors and hey, Dress up so they get a "treat". :)