I have in my right hand, direct from my home office, tonight's category: The Top Ten Reasons Halloween is a Strange
Holiday. It's the only time of year that . . .
10. . . . you
can cross dress without having to come out of the closet.
9. . . . Americans
actually consume a waxy substance known as "candy corn." (The
rest of the year the material is used to manufacture patio candles and
toilet seals.)
8. . . . wearing
a white sheet is politically correct.
7. . . . extortion
is legal under the guise of "Trick or Treat." ("Hand over
the candy or I'll toilet paper your house." You see, this is how protection
rackets get started. One day it's Tootsie Rolls, the next it's unmarked,
non-sequential twenty-dollar bills!)
6. . . . children
can play with knives and matches. (That's my theory why kids love to carve
jack-o-lanterns and light them.)
5. . . . the
fashion police takes a day off.
4. . . . after
364 days of spending billions of dollars to look beautiful, America spends
another million to sport warts, long noses, the complexion of a corpse,
and teeth only an orthodontist could love.
3. . . . no one
is on a diet!
2. . . . You
can wear a mask and go house to house collecting loot in a pillow casewithout
spending time serving time.
And, the number
one reason Halloween is a strange holiday . . . people celebrate the holiday
(which is short for "holy day") of "All Hallows Evening"
(an ancient rite of moral purification before "All Saints Day")
by dressing up as devils, vampires, axe murderers, and other morally challenged
characters.
So, what can
we conclude about this schizophrenic celebration? It's the one day of the
year we're free to be less than beautiful, to shun the fascist fashion
police, eat our body weight in miniature candy bars, and feel safe in welcoming
total strangerswarts and allto enjoy our hospitality.
Then again, it's
probably just some big marketing scheme by greedy costume makers, card
companies, and dentists. But do enjoy those Hershey dark chocolate
bars.
Copyright © 1997 James
N. Watkins
Comments
Thanks for taking a humorous look at Halloween and not reading into it all sorts of extra spiritual meaning
that is so often present today in the evangelical's quest to understand, interpret, and respond to their culture.
[a denominational leader] (November 2, 1998).




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