Simmian7 wrote:
am i the only one that realizes...that for one night we're expected to talk to strangers...when the rest of the year...we're expected to avoid/not talk to strangers?
and...this year...I noticed on facebook...a link to a website where you can check for pedophiles in your neighborhood...to know what house to "avoid". when you have to worry about that...then what kind of fun are you REALLY having? also, isn't that kind of discriminatory to the guy/gals house you are avoiding?
the whole holiday just really makes you wonder...don't it?
It doesn't make me wonder because I kind of know the origins...it's about cementing community ties, not approaching total strangers...pre-Christian times and in some cases into Christian times, adults and teens went from house to house, not little children, and it was a matter of a person being a "good neighbor" and giving you something, or being a "bad neighbor" and refusing you. There's more to it than that but that was the gist.
And I guess I've always seen it in that way: trick-or-treating is a community thing (I realize this isn't how everyone feels, it's how I feel). It's not a day for trusting strangers, it's a day for speaking to your neighbors - maybe the one day all year that any given person might do so. Certainly it is for me, and even then just from the street, waving as my kids go ring the bell...I am not social (no surprise there, I know). So it's kind of nice just that one day a year, to actually SEE who the heck your neighbors even are. All my neighbors recognize and remember my kids and my kids always say, "See you next year." I think it's so sweet.
I'm not comfortable in the slightest just going up to and speaking to a neighbor so it to me is a great check-in. Hey, here's my face. Here's yours. If you see somebody besides us on the street, it might be a stranger, so watch out. If the face is mine, you know I'm okay or at least that I'm traceable to this general vicinity.
Now...here's my make up I wore trick-or-treating: