Sunday, April 28, 2024
ADVT 
Life

No Trick-or-treaters? Buy Halloween Candy Anyway!

Beth J. Harpaz The Associated Press, 28 Oct, 2014 12:14 PM

    NEW YORK - Don Stewart and his wife will be home with the lights on Halloween night, waiting for trick-or-treaters. But like a lot of folks who stock up on candy, they'll probably end up eating it themselves.

    "My wife and I buy candy every year, knowing that trick-or-treaters won't come to see us," said Stewart, an artist in Homewood, Alabama. That's why they buy the treats they like, not necessarily what they think kids will like: "Nothing is wasted. If we plan well, there's usually enough to last us 'til Christmas."

    This little game of self-deception plays out each year in buildings where apartment-dwellers wait in vain for door knocks and on suburban side streets and country roads where kids don't wander. "We were bummed out the first few times," said Stewart, "until we realized, 'Hey this is a bonus. We can buy all the candy we want and eat it and it's not our fault.'"

    When Paula Werne moved to a rural stretch in Ferdinand, Indiana, 32 years ago with her farmer husband Gary, "I was skeptical we'd have any trick-or-treaters." But her husband insisted the location wouldn't deter locals.

    "I purchased multiple bags of goodies and positioned a welcoming jack-o-lantern in the front window," she recalled. And who came? "Not a soul. Not a single solitary soul ... I even checked to make sure the doorbell worked. Twice." Her husband ate the candy, and each year since, he has convinced her that "this might be the year."

    Some folks think fewer kids go door to door these days, with more organized parties and programs instead. "Kids do their trick-or-treating at school now because of safety reasons or fear of drunk drivers," Jason Varden, who works for an online videogame company, Gazillion, and lives with his wife in Milpitas, California. "It goes into the helicopter mom thing of 'We're not going to let our kids go up to strangers.'"

    The trend hasn't stopped him from buying the 200-plus-size bags of goodies from Target. "It's all for the children!" he insisted. "But we bought Kit Kats and Snickers — candy we knew we would eat if we had to."

    Bryanna Johns, 20, a student at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, isn't that far removed from her childhood trick-or-treating, but she thinks the practice "is losing its appeal. People are so worried about can you trust who your child is getting candy from. They're going trick-or-treating more in children's museums, churches and malls instead."

    She goes home Halloween night to help her mom answer the door, but they typically only get about 20 kids. So mom buys candy the family likes — Snickers and Reese's Pieces, rather than fruity or fizzy sweets — and they watch a horror movie at evening's end while finishing the leftovers.

    Monique Lewis also has fond memories of trick-or-treating as a kid in Arlington, Virginia. But as an adult living in three different apartments, she's never had a trick-or-treater.

    "First year in, I was so excited because I was certain that I would be flooded. By the time 10 p.m. had rolled around, I was standing in the hallway with my door open, frantically searching for the missing treaters," said Lewis, a marketing consultant now living in Manhattan. Each time she moved, she kept buying candy, thinking "every building is different." She even decorated her door to make it inviting.

    But usually, the day after Halloween, she's "eating all the candy and throwing impromptu get-togethers" to get rid of it.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Review: Rock ‘N’ Roll musical, Red Rock Diner

    Review: Rock ‘N’ Roll musical, Red Rock Diner
    This infectious musical captures the excitement and innocence of the city’s burgeoning rock ‘n’ roll scene.

    Review: Rock ‘N’ Roll musical, Red Rock Diner

    Hosting Thanksgiving For The First Time? Some Tips

    Hosting Thanksgiving For The First Time? Some Tips
    NEW YORK - The potatoes are wrong. The football game's too loud. The kids aren't dressed right. Thanksgiving can, of course, be a great joy, but with so many beloved traditions on the line it can also be prime ground for sniping and griping the first time the torch has been passed.

    Hosting Thanksgiving For The First Time? Some Tips

    How women can get the first date right

    How women can get the first date right
    If you have only talked over the phone, looked at a profile picture or texted each other - he really doesn’t know exactly how you look until you...

    How women can get the first date right

    Strict social hosts help curb underage drinking

    Strict social hosts help curb underage drinking
    Teenagers are less likely to drink at parties when they live in communities with particularly strong social host laws, finds a US-based study....

    Strict social hosts help curb underage drinking

    Infants know what your eyes tell

    Infants know what your eyes tell
    "Our study provides developmental evidence for the notion that humans possess specific brain processes that allow them to automatically...

    Infants know what your eyes tell

    Lab cells reveal how brain responds to memory and reward

    Lab cells reveal how brain responds to memory and reward
    Scientists have created cells that can detect changes in the brain associated with learning, memory and reward....

    Lab cells reveal how brain responds to memory and reward

    PrevNext