Shout out to whomever the guy was in our neighborhood that the kids said was able to identify all three costumes correctly at his door. He actually said without prompting, "Jackal, Chameleon, Chimera." That dude wins Halloween.
My kids also got a sense for the first time how unusually lively Halloween in Bay View is compared to the average neighborhood. We went through over 400 pieces of candy before we had to go inside and shut off the porch light. So many cute kids! Our neighbor down the street was out as usual with his light up roller skates and juggling clubs entertaining everyone, people were out on their front steps to greet the crowds, adults were dressed up (sometimes as part of a theme with their kids--we saw a whole Incredibles family), and the party across the street shared some great chili.
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We even stopped in Mona's high school on the way home where they had games and music and candy for anyone who wanted to participate. It was all great.
But then the next day during the city-wide daytime trick-or-treat, I took my kids up to a more affluent neighborhood where we have a relative because they wanted to see her and to wear their costumes one more time.
It was different from what they were used to. People were in their homes and you had to go up to the door and ring the bell. Most people weren't home, but it was hard to tell which houses they should try. Several houses just had bowls of candy sitting unattended on the porch. We saw a few other kids out, but not many. My kids were really confused. They kept asking where all the music and crowds were. I told them this looked a lot more like what trick-or-treating is most places. It's not the extreme decorating event it is in Bay View. One house even decorates both stories and the whole yard as part of an elaborate theme each year and puts out a donation box that collects thousands of dollars for charity. So when I say people decorate, I don't mean just a few pumpkins.
And I don't mean us--other than a few broken skeletons we just have our few pumpkins.
We do, however, have a real headstone that astounds people every year who touch it and go "What!?"
On the downside, trick-or-treat wasn't as exciting in the wealthier neighborhood, but on the upside, they gave out full-sized chocolate bars, so there was that.
You know what I like best, though, about Bay View Halloween? It's inclusive. I know there are kids at our door who are coming from other, less safe neighborhoods, and I am happy they do. I want them to feel welcome on my block, and they do. Also, right before a contentious election, there was something great about seeing people celebrating together regardless of the names on the signs stuck in their lawns.
There are also no limits on age. Everyone dresses up who wants to, and my teenagers are praised for dressing up and being creative and not looked at with scorn for being too old. My favorite costume this year was a man dressed in orange with a bunch of orange pool noodles tied to him, and after a minute I realized he was a big metal sculpture downtown called The Calling (which most people refer to as The Sunburst). When I asked him if I was right, he smiled and called the woman he was with over and she stood by him and lifted her arms which had white blinds under them like wings, and she was the Calatrava addition to the art museum. Another woman with them was the weather. It made my night. This is the world's worst photo of them, but I want to share it anyway:
This has been a year of my children being more vocally appreciative of the good things they have that they are beginning to realize are not universal. Mona actually told me at one point this summer when were walking along the lake that she's glad to have grown up here. This Halloween they all looked at me and said they were happy to have had such tremendous fun with that holiday in our neighborhood all their lives. I am just fortunate to have been able to give them that.
Your neighborhood really knows how to celebrate Halloween! Puts Manhattan to utter shame!
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