I think this is the secret to keeping little memories from your childhood. When something triggers a memory like a holiday, take a minute or two and jot it down. Writing about your life in little Kodak moments is so easy and over time can create a nice treasury of glimpses into your past.
Imagine if you had some stories like this one for your grandchildren and great-grandchildren to enjoy one day. I try to imagine what I would love to have from my parents and leave that for our kids. The fun is in the everyday details. I wish I knew more about my ancestors than their vital statistics. How fabulous to have something that I didn't have to analyze or wonder about...that they just left me as a gift. Journaling is a great way to spend some leisure time~try it, you'll like it.
Happy Halloween, 2012!
Vintage sepia photo where someone added
black glitter to the hats
and put it in a black frame.
One of my favorite Halloween Decorations
Especially for my Genealogy Friends!
In the olden days Halloween was different than it is today. Although I am not a big fan of the scary parts of Halloween, both the imagined and the real, there are things I do like about it. For one, it seems that most kids are pretty crazy about the costumes and the trick or treating. Because kids love it, they tend to remember it when they grow up. I think that any holiday that book marks childhood memories can be a good thing.
When I think back to my growing up years a lot of it is just a fog. The repetition of daily life seems to all blend into a happy feeling inside of me but not a lot of real specific things are there unless I search the archives of my memory with real intent. Things like Halloween seem to stand out pretty well.
It seems that the costumes were mostly homemade and I can remember a lot of ghosts and hobos. There were also a lot of gypsies and little girls in lots of mom's make-up and fancy fake jewelry and boys with blackened faces (to look like dirt) done by lighting a match to a cork and then rubbing it on your face. Lots of kids just wore their own clothes and a mask of some kind. I don't remember adults in costumes unless they were going to a grown-up party or wanted to really scare kids at their doors.
The tricks that I remember were soaping windows. It was something the bigger kids did that really made people mad as it was hard to get off the cars and houses. And if you really wanted to be devious, raw eggs were tossed. Heaven knows we never did it, Mom and Dad would never allow anything like that thankfully. In my Dad's day it was turning over outhouses and he was known to have participated in a few of those events! One time he and a bunch of kids put a guy's buckboard up on his barn roof out in the farmlands of North Dakota. They got in some major trouble from their parents for that. We on the other hand, were perfect little angels. Sure we were!
We had some fun school activities with costumes and bobbing for apples and old-fashioned things like that. I remember "going fishing" for prizes, eating popcorn balls and frosted cookies. These events were the precursor to the school carnivals of today I think.
Halloween was always a bench mark for the beginning of the darker, colder and rainier weather and staying warm outside under your costume was essential. It seems that it would be dark so early and was usually the first week of daylight savings time. And no one was interested in eating dinner, that's for sure! We just wanted to go, go go! The thing about candy in those days was it was a rare treat which made the pay dirt all the sweeter. (Is there a lesson for another day here?)
We would always pray for no rain in Sacramento where I grew up. Rain always put such a damper on the blocks and blocks of door to door trick or treating. We lived in a housing tract and going out was so much fun.
You didn't have to be afraid of weirdos that liked to poison kids and things like that. Kids were out in mass and parents just didn't have to worry about the safety of their kids like we did in our kids' day and especially now that we have grandkids. Fortunately, most people now just take their kids to homes of people they know and still every year you read of unfortunate events involving little kids. Not so in our care free days of growing up.
We all used large paper bags to collect our loot. One of our parents would always go with us until we were about 10. Then we could go alone if we took our little brother with us. One time I remember that I was 10, Steve was 8 and our baby brother, Gary, was 5. Out we went with Gary in tow and we hit every house for about five blocks. We had a ton of candy and were pretty excited. The few rich people even gave out 5 cent candy bars!! When we arrived home exhausted and happy we ran to our rooms to empty our bags on to the floor and count and sort the loot. Steve and I ran into the bedroom and then we heard our little brother crying in the kitchen.
I took the still life photos last night
at the Oakland Family Search Library.
One of our staff members, John Jex,
does these lovely arrangements for the Library.
He has an amazing eye for design.
This was really a treat to enjoy.
He has an amazing eye for design.
This was really a treat to enjoy.
The next thing I knew my Dad was standing over Steve and me saying that we needed to share our candy with Gary! " What? Are you kidding us?" I guess we weren't doing the best job of watching him as he ran to keep up with us that night. It seems little Gar, was not quite tall enough and he was dragging his paper bag in the wet grass. He arrived home with nothing but a big bag with a big hole in the bottom. Poor little guy! He was heart broken and we begrudgingly shared our candy (honestly how could we be so selfish and bratty?) To this day I call him and remind him not to drag his bag in the wet grass every Halloween! Love my brothers and those fond memories. Maybe just reading this has given you some memories you can capture and save for the future.
Have a safe and fun evening tonight if you are Going Out. We would sure like to do that with our grandies. Too bad they are so far away.
Faux Calories!
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