The tricky business of Halloween.
Today we bought the teeth and the fake blood. My six-year-old was beside herself. ‘I can’t believe I finally have fangs! I’ve been wanting them for ages!’
My little girl doesn’t fantasise about dressing up as a fairy or a princess or even a ballerina. She wants to be a vampire. I like to think of it as gender-diverse role modelling. Sadly I think it’s just powerful marketing of American cultural traditions into our Aussie pop culture.
My eldest daughter is 20, and while Halloween was on our dress-up agenda, back then we were usually the only family wandering the street. Me in a black doona cover with my broom, and the kids covered in bed sheets. I refused to cut eye holes because the only white sheets I had were 1000 thread Egyptian cotton. Being blind ghosts put them at an advantage, they didn’t have to experience trick or treating rejection first hand.
No-one was expecting us. No-one gave us anything. It was demoralising.
But, like most young Australian families fed on a diet of Nickelodeon, we persisted, and now more than a decade on, this Halloween thing has really caught on. Some people even carve pumpkins. One website told me that I could carve decorative pumpkins in just a few hours! What kind of loser dedicates hours to vegetable sculpture? Isn’t there a jack-o-lantern setting on the Thermomix? We don’t even have the right sort of pumpkins. You just don’t get the same ambience with a butternut or a Queensland Blue.
I almost removed a finger trying to cut some eyeholes and then I couldn’t work out how the hell you light the candles. Instead I’ve carved a few eggplants. Much softer medium, and I figured the candles might dry roast them nicely so I can use them in my salads next week.
I wasn’t always on board with this Halloween thing. I stood on the sidelines with my sanctimonious sisters who scorned the unchecked distribution of sugar to children at a time of peak obesity. But then I watched their lonely sad children eating sultanas, with their healthy little faces pressed against glass wishing they were one of the happy fat possibly pre-diabetic kids on a sugar stampede having anarchic fun. So I thought, what the hell. It’s only one day of the year, and it’s kind of creepy and non-nonsensical, which appeals to my evil side.
I love that you dress your beautiful child as some sort of tormented demon and then door knock the people in your street who do their best to ignore you for 364 days of the year. This is the one day where you have an opportunity to either demand sweet treats or egg them. Either way, it’s a unique way to connect with your neighbours.
100 years of Halloween costumes in just 3 minutes:
Most years I have a bunch of kids with me. It always starts off well, the children are polite and well mannered, but after the sugar kicks in, so do the addict behaviours. Someone will start crying ‘you have more lollipops then me!’ and then snatch one to even the score. Then that kid will punch the thief in the back. Then there will be crying. Then I knock on another door, with my screaming, crying brood. I can see the person inside hiding. They’ve obviously run out of treats.
A few years a go a packet of minties would get you through. These days you need a $40 investment at the lolly shop. And don’t even think for an instant you can hand out muesli bars. You’ll be blacklisted as a healthy house. We have favourite houses in our street. I was delighted when a child told me that my house is rated high as a ‘must hit’ Halloween address. (I leave my husband home alone while I take my kids trick or treating to distribute the sugary loot. I had previously tried an ‘honesty’ system with a note ‘Just take three treats of your choice’ – it went pear shaped after one little monster took the lot. He was later found holding his tummy moaning with sherbety foam tracing his lips.
I love checking out the dress ups. It really pushes a Mum to the brink of creative desperation. Anyone can buy a costume on line. It takes real genius to come up with an outfit in just five minutes. Who doesn’t love the kid wrapped in toilet paper aka Egyptian mummy? Last year I themed the family as The Walking Dead. Bleak, I know, but it seemed the perfect comment on suburban life.
And as I discovered, there’s nothing that bonds a family more than covering yourself with mud and fake blood.
Have you got your Halloween costumes sorted?
Top Comments
Sigh. Being a pagan/Wiccan, this is one of my pet peeves. I hate going through this with people every year, but here goes. Halloween is a SEASONAL holiday. It is not a 'set date' holiday world-wide, celebrated all over the world like Christmas is, regardless of winter Christmas in America, or Summer Christmas in Australia. Halloween is, (hint: the colours of 'fall' autumn orange, black, brown) an AUTUMN event. It is autumn now. In the NORTHERN HEMISPHERE. It is spring in the Southern Hemisphere right now. Halloween comes from the traditional AUTUMN harvest ie harvesting pumpkins. Additionally, Halloween known as Samhain (pronounced Sew-en) is in Autumn when the veil between earth and the spiritual world/deceased world is said to be the thinnest. It is exactly the opposite way around, here in Australia on October 31. Wrong season. The Southern Hemisphere's ( that is Australia, and New Zealand) Halloween is celebrated by pagans in Australia on April 30th/May 1st. So, we are 6 months late, or 6 months early. Take your pick. Either way, it is inappropriate for us to be celebrating an autumn harvest celebration, in SPRING. I could go on and on, but you get my point. In frustrated resignation at the futility of educating people of the importance of celebrating a seasonal holiday at the RIGHT TIME of the year, I stumble off my soap-box.
Yes Salem (yep twins!) you are correct on all counts but I see no problem in celebrating Halloween the same time as the northern hemisphere, October 31st. We live in a global community after all. Please feel free to feast & rejoice in the celebration of Beltane and let the clueless happy people go along their way. Blessed be ✨
Halloween is by far and away my favourite time of year and I've never understood the whole "Halloween is an American only holiday". I love getting dressed up, watching some scary movies, giving people a good jump scare!!! We set up our place as a haunted house last years and it was sooooo much fun. The world can be such a sad, stressful place sometimes...I'll welcome anything that makes it a bit more fun with open arms!
Your plan sounds like a lot of fun. Mine involves a Simpsons Treehouse Of Horror marathon on TV! The thing that annoys me is how commercial it is (and yes, I know that's a cliche). My junk mail for the last couple of weeks has been page after page of Halloween tat, just enormous quantities of junk - lollies, toys, decorations etc. I can imagine it must drive parents nuts, especially as it's not an established tradition here as it is in the US. It feels like the retailers are just desperate for another money-maker before the Christmas stuff kicks in. Not gonna lie, though, growing up watching American TV shows, I'm kind of jealous we didn't do trick or treating when I was a kid!