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Sunday, October 31, 2004

Halloween!

Halloween.

That one night of the year when you can let your true self take centerstage, whether it be a blood-dripping, fanged lothario creature of the night complete with a cool cape or a Pretty in pink sparkly fairy princess complete with a cool tiarra.

But while some things remain the same, like the thrill of "transformation" and the joy of a handful of the "Good Candy" from your kindly next door neighbor, some things have definitely changed. When I was a kid, oh so long ago, Trick-or-treating was a door to door adventure! My friends and I would map out which route was the best in our quest for maximizing our confection foraging, remembering from years past which houses had Hershey's and M&M's and which ones had the dreaded cheap lollipops. Of course much of the fun was in the unknown. The surprise of what would be dropped into our sacks and the anticipation of how our older brothers would try once again to scare the bejeebers out of us.

And then there were the tricks... That one night a year when harmless pranks were not only overlooked , they were expected. The night when no yard jockey or ornamental Gnome was safe. Wise homeowners gathered their fake deer and flamingos within the protected walls of their garages knowing that anything could happen when the adolescent goblins were on a Sweet Tart high. Eggs and toilet paper mysteriously disappeared from our homes, only to astonishingly reappear in the yards of our grouchy, less-lovable neighbors. "Who could do such a thing?" our moms clucked the next day. Juvenile delinquents from bad neighborhoods we "guessed", our halos secured firmly back in place.

Spooky thrills, suburban mayhem and sugary gorging fests... Ah, those were the days.

But things have changed. While some people still hand out candy the "old-fashioned" way, most people aren't even home. More and more communities and neighborhoods have Halloween carnivals with games and rides, face painting and popcorn. Structured family fun with little or no candy. As a parent, I can appreciate the fact that this is much safer for the children. But as a large kid, I miss the adventure, the surprises, the thrills.

And while my kids enjoy trick or treating at a few familiar houses after pushing through the crowds at the carnival, they aren't really interested in eating the candy. THIS I don't understand! My favorite part of the whole Halloween experience was going home at the end of the night and pouring out my entire haul and gazing upon what I had got, sorting the good candy from the crappy candy. It was the Best!

Everything changes. The important thing is that the kids have fun, are safe, and stay out of trouble. I guess I don't really want them doing some of the things that I did. Heck... I don't even want them to know about some of the things that I did.

And now, if you'll excuse me, I have to go change into my Halloween costume. I'm going as a middle-age, gray-haired, out-of-shape Dad. Life is scary enough without embellishments.

Thursday, October 28, 2004

ROTD Riddle of the Day

Late afternoons I often bathe.
I'll soak in water piping hot.
My essence goes through my see through clothes.
Used up am I; I've gone to pot.
What am I?

Sunday, October 24, 2004

ROTD Riddle of the Day

You answer me, although I never ask you questions. What am I?

Tuesday, October 19, 2004

ROTD Riddle of the Day

A new medical building containing 100 offices had just been completed. Dave was hired to paint the numbers 1 to 100 on the doors. How many times will Dave have to paint the number nine?

Sunday, October 17, 2004

ROTD Riddle of the Day

Sorry, my ROTD are turning into ROTEOD (Riddle of the Every Other Day) or worse.

A bus driver was heading down a street in Colorado. He went right past a stop sign without stopping, he turned left where there was a "no left turn" sign, and he went the wrong way on a one-way street. Then he went on the left side of the road past a cop car. Still - he didn't break any traffic laws. Why not?

Wednesday, October 13, 2004

ROTD Riddle of the Day

I have keys that open no locks,
I have space, but there is no room,
You can enter, but you can't go in.
What am I?

Tuesday, October 12, 2004

Reunion Haiku

Reunion Wish
by
Tammy Odneal Bridie

Oh, I hope
There will be,
Someone who looks
Worse than me.

Monday, October 11, 2004

ROTD Riddle of the Day

I can run constantly without ever getting tired.
When I run, I frustrate people and drive them crazy,
Yet I don't even have to move to irritate you.
What am I?

Sunday, October 10, 2004

ROTD Riddle of the Day

I'm one of five, I'm not alive.
The one who sent me forth became king,
The one who received me died.
What am I?

Tuesday, October 05, 2004

ROTD Riddle of the Day

Sarah went to get her drivers license. When asked her age, she replied: "My age today is
three times what it will be three years from now minus three times what my age was three
years ago." How old is Sarah?

Thank you very much for continuing to stop by. No new story. Hopefully soon. At least I am keeping up with the ROTD and I do update my other blogs with stuff (check my profile).

Sunday, October 03, 2004

ROTD Riddle of the Day

Name a five letter word which has three consonants all the same and two different vowels. Every now and then you see this while running a Window95/98 on your PC.

Friday, October 01, 2004

ROTD Riddle of the Day

A fairly easy one.
Eight years ago, Sam was eight times the age of his son Sam Jr. Today, if you add their ages together, they add up to 52. How old are Sam and his son?
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