Halloween — LIVE!

On the occasion of this annual festival of all that is gory, dead, undead and disgusting, I bring you this thing of beauty.

It’s a positively pumpkin sky. Which I’m convinced the heavens gifted me with, after seeing my aversion to the whole “holiday” yesterday.

Yes, you read that right. God reads my blog.

Well at any rate, tonight was Trick-or-Treating, and we did the neighborhood laps, extorting candy from the neighbors.

This particular neighbor happens to be my mother, so the extortion is entirely justified. Grandmothers, after all, are entirely set up to ply their grandchildren with sweets they’re not supposed to have.

It’s quite a sociable neighborhood, is it not? With friendly signs telling it like it is. I chose not take offense.

Other houses sported carved pumpkins in varying states of decay. This one looked pretty much freshly killed.

Where is my carved pumpkin you might ask? Still in its pristine state, I answer. I’m still not over the year I sweated and slaved to carve this great enormous thick-walled bastard the likes of which I’d never seen. You could have gotten 12 or 15 pies out of that thing. I traced a simple triangle-eyes, circle nose, gap-tooth mouth upon its lumpy countenance — and 45 minutes later I had like an eye and a half out. It was unendurable. I haven’t carved a pumpkin since, though I’m sure if I mustered up the energy while trolling down at the old pumpkin patch, I could discern one that had a little more scope for carving.

But I doubt I will.

I just say, now that I prefer the harvest decorating style of pumpkin and dare anyone to make me carve it. Eviscerate — maybe.

Let me be clear, though — Halloween, in my eyes, is for the small fry, and this particular tater tot had a marvelous time. “This is the BEST HALLOWEEN!” he kept squealing, the whole way home after a good hour or so of neighbor-extortion. “I remembered to say thank you!” he also was wont to report.

For that, it was worth just a little death and dismemberment.

So much spirit, it’s scary

There’s something ridiculous, and most probably truly scary, about someone who just spent 20 minutes taking 97 pictures of herself in the hopes of getting a decent shot of my Halloween jewelry.

It’s scary because frankly, it’s not all that fantastic. Much more interesting is my son’s Halloween costume, which he donned in the gray dawn of morning in order to wear it to Preschool.

Darling, no? As are Mrs. Fleenor and Mrs. Gabbard, there on the right, who confided she was “too embarrassed” to pick up her morning Diet Coke at McDonald’s this morning. Can you believe that?

This year Trassie appears as Luigi, of Mario Brothers fame, which every kid I know insists upon calling Mario Bros. Like, he’s my bro, plural of. Like that. Maybe that’s how the games are marketed; I don’t know — but it’s one of those things that make me cranky if I haven’t gotten enough coffee or I don’t have more important things to bother me.

Honestly, Halloween is not one of my favorite holidays. I mean, really: death and dismemberment, who is really for that? Plus the decorations don’t even fit the definition. Don’t look to me as someone who wants rig out her house so that it looks like crap.

Oh, I can be talked into things. One year I purchased some of that spiderweb junk and draped it all over the bushes so that it appeared a massive arachnid had set up camp in my hollies. This theoretical spider also caught all manner of dried, curled leaves; windblown Kroger plastic grocery bags; and the occasional small rodent.

No, the rodent is a lie; he was discovered beneath the recycling container decomposing. Thankfully he’d mostly gone back to earth because there really wasn’t any stench, just bones — which has perplexed me ever since because I more or less faithfully take out the recycling every week. So how did he die and lay decomposing and stinking for weeks? Maybe it was because I rolled the cans to the curb after dark and never saw the horrid thing. Bleck-o. Now I’m viewing trash disposal in a whole new light. Thank heaven I’ve got two slaves, I mean adolescents, to take over most of the KP duty.

See what thinking about Halloween has done? Set me to ruminating on dead animals and stinking garbage. Oh what a fun season. And let’s don’t forget about the whole reason for the season: evil spirits loose in the world. It falls the night before a Holy Day in the Church calendar, All Saint’s Day. Halloween, or All Hallow’s Eve harkens back to a pagan holiday that the Christian observence was meant to counteract. Something about going all out for a holiday celebrating the antithesis of what I believe just chafes a wee bit.

But that’s not to say I am AGAINST HALLOWEEN or that IT’S THE WORK OF THE DEVIL. I mean, look at me, I’m wearing skulls.

Halloween is full of happy memories of my childhood — trying to cover then entire residential area of Carrollton in the time allotted for trick-or-treating was always the major goal of the night’s festivities. On a good night’s haul, we went home to change bags more than once. Then there’s the sweet memory of the Halloween party in the school basement at church, where the perfunctory bowl-of-spaghetti-as-guts were the main attraction of the “haunted house.” I’ll never forget the time I got water up my nose bobbing for apples and thought I was going to die, right there in the sight of the Blessed Virgin smiling down upon the satanic activities. Good times, good times.

Last year I purchased a small graveyard from a neighbor who was moving out, peopled it with a ghoul coming out of the ground and threw in some pumpkins to up the cheer factor a bit.

Trassie, who as you can see, last year dressed as Spiderman, thought it was pretty fun. But after a while the ghoul, who has taken up residence in the garage since he concluded his duties last year, started to bother him and he didn’t care to see his ghastly face every time we got out of the car. Ditto for the hideous death head, or something that Tras nabbed at the Wal-marts a couple weeks ago, expressly at the behest of Mssr. Trasimond, who wanted a “scary thing” to art the house up a little bit. Ever since it’s been home, he’s begged Tras to get rid of it. I can’t say I disagree; Mr. Death Head has spent the week facing the wall on top of the refrigerator, apparently his own personal version of hell.

So every once it a while, it’s fun to get in the spirit of Halloween. Death and decomposition, whee! I’m content to throw some skulls around my neck, rig up my children as Nintendo characters, Illegal Aliens (it’s true; Christopher is sporting the quasi-racist little green man-with-a-green card mask) and even a Powder Puff Girl.

Just as long as no real ghouls come knocking and turn me into a simpering idiot, prone to scampering through the house like the demons of hell are after me, like I did one time when Tras came back from a shopping expedition unexpectedly.

It prompted him to ask if I found this “tippie-toe run” an effective deterrent to burglers, home invaders or visitors from the spirit world.

Well you never know. It might.

Enjoy the season, celebrate death and remember when you go to Mass early Sunday morning to thank God he spared you a visit from some miscellaneous demon from hell the previous night.

From ghoulies and ghosties
And long-leggedy beasties
And things that go bump in the night,
Good Lord, deliver us!

Amen!

Shoe thing

A couple years ago I was visiting my husband’s family in North Carolina. At some point the big box of photos came out and we spent several pleasant hours poring over the old snapshots, and not a few slides, with much calling back and forth, “Is this Diana or Rachel?” “Where was this taken?” “Where was I when you all were here?”

It was entertaining for me because obviously I wasn’t anywhere near wherever ‘there’ was at the time. After a while we dug down into the good part: photos from Tras’s parents early years together, and even some of their own childhood photos.

As we looked there was one picture that I was completely struck by. As though it was just yesterday, I remember seeing it: every detail is seared into my brain.

OK, that’s a lie. Not every detail is seared. One detail is, shall we say, somewhat indelibly marked. And that is the shoes my lovely mother-in-law wore the night she was crowned Homecoming Queen in Vivian, Louisiana.

Mercy, I wish I had that photo to show you. Tras’s dad might have it scanned, but seeing as how he lives way up in God’s Country in the North Carolina mountains with no Internet access, I doubt he could email it to me anyway.

But there she was, circa 1947, on the arm of some football player carrying a bouquet of flowers, beaming, and sporting these killer peep-toe ankle strap power wedges.

“Look at her shoes!” I exclaimed, while everyone else was saying, “Aw, look how pretty Mom is!”

“Oh she is! She is!” I hastened to add, babbling something about her cute hair style and smart little jacket dress.

But you know my eyes wandered. Back to the shoes. Those darling vintage cuties that my very own mother-in-law got to wear when they were au courant, the very latest thing!

The picture-looking crowd moved on, but I kept flipping back to the Homecoming Queen, occasionally squeaking out, “man, those are cute shoes!” when finally Tras just looks at me and says, “Do you see anything BUT shoes??”

Dear God, I’ve been caught. Found out. Guilty as charged.

I place the blame squarely at the feet, if you will, of Dorothy. We women of a certain age, Boomers and post-Boomers, grew up watching, with religious-like fervor, the annual television airing of The Wizard of Oz. Plans that had been made were postponed. Schedules were completely rearranged. One HAD to be home watching the night that Dorothy was sucked up into the sky, out of black-and-white Kansas and into the glorious Land of Oz in living color — where a miracle occurred. No, the miracle wasn’t that she survived a cyclone ride. No, it wasn’t that she killed some witch and some shifty little people proclaimed her God Emperess of Dune.

No, the miracle was that she no longer had to trudge through life in those hideous, dusty, crappy-looking, rundown farm girl boot clodhopper things. She got new shoes!

And thus, an obsession was born.

I cannot believe that I’m the only person that can more or less enumerate most of the shoes I’ve ever owned in my life. But then again, maybe I am. I still think about a pair navy pumps I had in college, and a coral pair of huaraches I wore with everything, c. 1986. No, these aren’t that pair. Mine had darling little laces across the front which sounds weird, but believe me they were adorable.

I found myself telling a friend the other day about a photo taken of my cousins and me around 1975. I was around 12 or 13 and all my cousins were somewhere in the neighborhood of infant.

My dad was the eldest of nine, and there was quite an age gap that showed up around aunt #6. I’ve even got one aunt that’s five years younger than I am.

But the point is, many of these aunts were beginning their families when I was hitting adolescence, and the amusing photo featured me just plain covered up in kids. But, as I told Missy, I was wearing this great pair of stacked-heel loafers with an enormous block heel that made me feel exceedingly groovy, especially when worn with genuine pantyhose and a minidress.

And that’s what happened, too: I spent about half the conversation describing the shoes I had on when I was 12 and the other half detailing my dad’s family history.

These days I have found the Internet is quite adept at feeding my hunger for cute cheap (and by cheap I mean inexpensive not cheapo!) shoes. I’ve found tons of gorgeous sandals, wedges, clogs, pumps, sport shoes and even CROCS, God help me, for as much as 90% off retail.

I’ve got a horrifying weakness for cowboy boots … oh, hell let’s just be honest: boots in general. Gladiator sandals make me weak in the knees. Stiletto heels inspire the required naughtiness while ensuring that indeed, my legs look long.

I’m sure greater minds than mine have analyzed the female obsession with shoes, because if the Internet has taught us anything, it is that We Are Not Alone. My friends and family are well aware of my inclination to seek out all that is Shoe in any situation. Coworkers wander in to see what style UPS has brought.

Never mind that I’ve got clogs on my screen saver. Please ignore the photo of my Old Gringo boots that still graces my bulletin board. I just wish I could find a good vintage reproduction of the fabu strappy sandals that were once worn by a post-war Homecoming Queen.

On a roll

Yesterday I burdened the world wide web with an abundance of my photos from New York last summer. I’ve got bunches more, many of which send me into uncontrollable giggles every time I look at them which, believe me, is not a pretty sight.

So let’s just take a look at one today.

And here is a quiz for you: Name all the reasons why I love this photo. There are at least five.

Have a great weekend.

Love,

Ellen