Growing up in a small town in southern Indiana, fall was always my favorite season. I loved the changing colors of the leaves, the cooler temperatures and of course, dressing up for Halloween.
Back in the sixties, few stores carried pre-packed Halloween costumes, which meant you had to come up with your own. I’d try and pick a design none of my friends would have, and make sure it was something my mom could sew without a pattern. TV characters were always a big inspiration: one year I was Wilma Flintstone; the next year I went as Cousin It from the Addams Family.
My brother was in his early teens by the time I was old enough to go trick-or-treating, and he’d always take me around the neighborhood if I agreed to share the candy I got. Every year, one of the ladies on our block would have no idea who I was. She’d say the costume was just too good for her to tell who was begging for candy on her front porch. She’d hem and haw and make wild guesses as to my true identity. Then, when I told her who I was, she’d pretend to be shocked–as if my homemade costume had truly made me unrecognizable. I’m pretty sure she did this with all the kids who stopped by her house, but at the time it made me feel pretty special.
While it wasn’t a written law or city ordinance, it was understood that you stayed in your own neighborhood when you went trick-or-treating. My best friend, Terri, lived next to a dentist who gave out toothbrushes and tiny tubes of toothpaste. There wasn’t anything quite that exotic on my block, but sometimes the homeowners would run out of candy and hand out money instead. A handful of nickels can seem like a big deal when you’re seven.
These days, it’s rare for me to venture out on Halloween night. I’m usually at home, watching TV. This year, though, one of my co-workers is having a costume party and I already know what I’m wearing. I’m going to put on a bathrobe, put curlers in my hair and go as Ethel Mertz. I’ll let you know if Fred shows up.