KJJ
You Have an Axe to Grind
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Halloween always brings back a lot of great memories. October 31 is just another day on my calendar now and has been for many years, but as a child growing up it was one of my favorite days. Halloween is the one time when you can pretend to be something you're not and be rewarded for it. My trick-or-treating years were during the 1960s and part of the 70s. You know you’re getting old when some of the Halloween costumes you wore as a kid have become high priced collectibles. It didn't make my daily mega dose of Geritol go down any easier seeing "vintage" to describe an old Deputy Dawg costume like the one I wore as a child. There were no Halloween stores with wall to wall costumes and accessories years ago. Parents either made their kids Halloween costumes from cheap household materials or they took them to a five and dime and bought them a costume in a box for under 10 bucks.
You would put them on over your clothes. The eye holes on the mask never fit your eyes perfectly, which limited your vision. The breathing holes were so damn tiny they wouldn't facilitate oxygen flow, making it difficult to breathe, but naturally you never said anything fearing you wouldn’t be allowed to wear it. The growth of TV in the 1960s-70s and the programs we watched, especially on Saturday mornings had a big influence on the Halloween costumes we wore. Along with the usual ghouls and goblins on Halloween night were the George Jetsons, Quick Draw McGraws, Huckleberry Hounds and Atom Ants. You would see one of the Beatles tagging along with Little Joe Cartwright and trailing behind trying to keep up was a pint sized Maytag repairman.
The streets around the small town I grew up in were so traffic free that some parents would allow their kids to trick-or-treat unsupervised with a group of other kids, with the older kids keeping an eye on the younger kids. Parents were probably more worried about their kids on Halloween when they outgrew trick-or-treating, because Halloween isn’t all about cute costumes, candy corn, cookies and M&Ms, it’s about pranks! Water balloons, talc bombs and toilet papering people’s property. The neighborhoods were a potential pranking battle ground for kids who after a decade of trick-or-treating had finally grown tired of going from door to door on Halloween night, pretending to be Bullwinkle, Mr. Whipple and Gumby, just to get a bag full of candy. They were ready to up their game as teenagers and play some tricks on Halloween.
You would put them on over your clothes. The eye holes on the mask never fit your eyes perfectly, which limited your vision. The breathing holes were so damn tiny they wouldn't facilitate oxygen flow, making it difficult to breathe, but naturally you never said anything fearing you wouldn’t be allowed to wear it. The growth of TV in the 1960s-70s and the programs we watched, especially on Saturday mornings had a big influence on the Halloween costumes we wore. Along with the usual ghouls and goblins on Halloween night were the George Jetsons, Quick Draw McGraws, Huckleberry Hounds and Atom Ants. You would see one of the Beatles tagging along with Little Joe Cartwright and trailing behind trying to keep up was a pint sized Maytag repairman.
The streets around the small town I grew up in were so traffic free that some parents would allow their kids to trick-or-treat unsupervised with a group of other kids, with the older kids keeping an eye on the younger kids. Parents were probably more worried about their kids on Halloween when they outgrew trick-or-treating, because Halloween isn’t all about cute costumes, candy corn, cookies and M&Ms, it’s about pranks! Water balloons, talc bombs and toilet papering people’s property. The neighborhoods were a potential pranking battle ground for kids who after a decade of trick-or-treating had finally grown tired of going from door to door on Halloween night, pretending to be Bullwinkle, Mr. Whipple and Gumby, just to get a bag full of candy. They were ready to up their game as teenagers and play some tricks on Halloween.