Do those three words get your goat? Does the very mention of October 31 launch an instant tirade against the evils of small children dressing as superheroes and begging for sugar?
Love it or hate it? The very idea of Halloween polarizes Australians.
There are those brought up, like me, to believe that it’s an American import wrongly thrust upon our kids. We cry that it’s just a global marketing scam from the confectionary giants.
And then there are those, like my kids, who start getting their costumes out in September. Who make decorations daily, who hoard lollies to give out at the door, who wait in breathless anticipation and count down days on a spooky calendar? My three kids can’t understand why some of their friends aren’t allowed to dress as Superheroes and eat chocolate on a school night.
They can’t fathom how ‘When-I-Was-A-Kid’ Halloween was only something that weird Addams Family in the spooky house at Number 36 did.
In Australia the celebration of Halloween is gaining momentum. Research over the last few years has shown a surprising 26% of Australians planned to celebrate it. The majority of these were families of primary school children, and not surprisingly the majority planned to ‘trick or treat.’
Obviously the left over three quarters of Australians never visited my street where Halloween grows every year and literally hundreds of children parade the scarily decorated streets dressed as lolly gobbling ghouls.
‘It’s actually a lovely way to meet the neighbours’ says Sally, mum of three year old Ellie. ‘The kids have fun, it’s harmless, those Grinches who complain need to lighten up.’