Woooooooot—it’s Halloween! At long last!
Halloween is particularly fun when it’s on a Friday. My little town “observed” trick-or-treating last night, but I’m going with Dr. Fiancée and my niece and nephews tonight (we’re not dressing up, but the kids are). I’m looking forward to some family time.
How are you celebrating tonight, readers?
With that, here is 31 October 2019’s “Happy Halloween!“:
It’s Halloween! All the build-up, all the ghost stories, it’s finally here!
Last night I took the opportunity to carve my one of the two pumpkins I picked up earlier in the month ($4 a pop!). He’s the cheeky little guy pictured above, and in the photo collage below (I’m getting fancy with the production values in this post).
His brother was stolen off my front porch Wednesday night. I’d just gotten in bed and switched off the lights when I heard some tires squealing. Thinking it was one of my neighbor’s buddies hydroplaning on the wet street, I didn’t think much of it, until my neighbor began shouting for me minutes later!
I threw on a t-shirt and he and a friend reported that a big dude ran up to the porch and grabbed something. Sure enough, one of the big fat pumpkins was gone! Darn teenagers and their Halloween hijinks.
But I suppose that’s all part of the fun of Halloween (although I wanted to carve another one of these little guys). Tonight I’ll get to see my little niece and nephews toddling around their neighborhood, provided it’s not raining and storming, as the forecast predicts.
As I wrote Monday, Halloween in South Carolina is always hot—and muggy. The forecast for tomorrow calls for a high of 85 degrees, and a low of 50—talk about bipolar. Let’s hope the lower end of that is while we’re trick-or-treating. While I was putting out my pumpkin last night, it was decidedly un-autumnal, with thick, humid air all around.
Halloween gets a bad rap among us evangelical Christians, but its roots are deeply Christian. My new blogger buddy NEO of Nebraska Energy Observer has a piece up today about All Saints’ Day Eve. In it, he links to an essay by Holly Scheer at The Federalist, “Christians Used To Do Halloween Better Than Pagans.” Scheer argues that, rather than All Saints’ Day being glommed onto the existing Celtic festival of Samhain, the tradition goes back to the early Church. It was a way to honor martyrs for Christ.
The name and date for “All Saints’ Day” were affixed later, by Pope Gregory III, but the tradition was well-founded in Christendom. The practice of “trick-or-treating,” which Scheer points out developed in the late Middle Ages, originated with children going door-to-door asking for food in exchange for prayers.
Like so many other things that are good and true (and fun!), traditionalists and conservative Christians have had the Truth stripped from them, instead wrapped up in a gauzy, pagan-friendly narrative. But it wasn’t the Christians who stole Halloween; according to Scheer, it’s the other way around—a bigger myth than those non-existent razor blades in children’s apples.
Regardless, I’m thrilled to celebrate some spooky fun with the family. Be safe out there, have fun, and Happy Halloween!
Mwahahahahahaha!
—TPP




Happy Halloween, dude, from the both of us! 👍🎃
I checked out the last of your one minute shorts. Gutted that Ju-On 2 wasn’t there and Season of the Witch was Halloween 3, not 2. Still, a good list.
Enjoy trick or treating with the kids. Dress up next year – I reckon you’d make a good Leatherface! 😂
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Oh, man, I know—I’m sorry I couldn’t get Ju-On 2 on there this year. This month has been crazy—house-buying stuff, work, my grandfather passing earlier this week, Dr. F’s crazy rotations, final wedding planning, etc.—and I didn’t have time to watch it. But I will write a review of it one day, and my plan is to feature it for next year’s 31 Days of Halloween. I’ll have to get to Halloween 2 next year; again, I ran out of time and slots!
Happy Halloween—and Happy Reformation Day, as my Bapti-Lutheran neighbor has pointed out!
My best to you and Tina; I’ll take the Leatherface recommendation under consideration, ha! Also, let Tina know that here recommendation of The Haunting was a good one—it’s been one of the more popular videos on the list.
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She thanks you and for also using her decorations in your heading – she’s done just as well this year!
We’re sorry to read about your grandfather. Our commiserations. Don’t worry about the film. I’ll review it next year.
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Of course! I thought that was a picture you’d submitted some years ago.
Thank you, my friend. He was 90; I’m amazingly blessed to have had forty years with him!
Here’s the obituary on the funeral home’s website: https://www.hatcherfuneralhome.com/obituaries/Mr-James-Marvin-Jones?obId=46236144#/obituaryInfo
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