Anonymous wrote:My son has a friend who always came trick or treating with us because he lives in Anacostia, and they don't trick or treat there. His mother would come and bring his 2 brothers. Every time parents would leave out a bowl of candy these kids thought that meant take as many as you want! Awesome! The mom would try to be polite and say, just take two but we were both looking at each other like WTF. Who leaves a bowl of candy out and expects kids to be on some kind of "honor system". It's candy for Christ sake. There are bigger issues in life. Seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why you'd put the bowl out anyway. Halloween is supposed to be about the interaction between trick or treaters and neighbors. Not an opportunity to collect candy in the abstract.
And I don't understand what is so hard to understand. We put a bowl of candy out with a note to please take two pieces each because my family enjoys trick or treating as a family. Neither my husband nor I want to be left at home while the other is having fun with our kids, seeing our neighbors and friends. Yet, we want to make sure that those trick or treating can collect some candy. It is really quite simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only idiots leave a whole bowl of candy on their front step. Drunks who are too busy drinking to actually hand out candy. Just turn off you lights for goodness sake.
This is CC, did they hire lawyers yet... that is my favorite part of CC.
Doesn't CC "own" the police department, have they blamed the police for not doing their job.
Oh, CC, I miss living there... not!
Wrong. The people on my street who did this were busy taking their own kids out trick or treating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why you'd put the bowl out anyway. Halloween is supposed to be about the interaction between trick or treaters and neighbors. Not an opportunity to collect candy in the abstract.
And I don't understand what is so hard to understand. We put a bowl of candy out with a note to please take two pieces each because my family enjoys trick or treating as a family. Neither my husband nor I want to be left at home while the other is having fun with our kids, seeing our neighbors and friends. Yet, we want to make sure that those trick or treating can collect some candy. It is really quite simple.
If kids just want candy, they or their parents can buy a bag at CVS. The point of Halloween is to get dressed up, knock on the door of a house belonging to people you may not know, say "trick or treat," and THEN get candy. People always complain about kids who don't play by the rules--kids who don't dress up, kids who don't say anything, etc. But adults who just dump a bowl of candy in front of the door are just as bad. How would you feel if you took your kids trick or treating and found that everyone had gone out, just leaving candy on the doorstep? That would be kind of a bust.
It would be way worse if we went out to trick or treat and all of the houses were dark...no candy at all.
+100
This exactly. A bowl a candy left on a stoop is better than dark houses up and down the street.
Anonymous wrote:This is so interesting - my first reaction (I'm on the listserv) was that it was not okay to post the video of these kids. It was a public shaming that I'm not okay with. OTOH, the *behavior* was wrong - if they had just described it and people commented on it then I think that's fine. I'm surprised that this thread is 7 pages long and nobody is really discussing the video part of this. Kids make mistakes and a whole bowl of unattended candy is tempting, but parents should still let their kids know it is not okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why you'd put the bowl out anyway. Halloween is supposed to be about the interaction between trick or treaters and neighbors. Not an opportunity to collect candy in the abstract.
And I don't understand what is so hard to understand. We put a bowl of candy out with a note to please take two pieces each because my family enjoys trick or treating as a family. Neither my husband nor I want to be left at home while the other is having fun with our kids, seeing our neighbors and friends. Yet, we want to make sure that those trick or treating can collect some candy. It is really quite simple.
If kids just want candy, they or their parents can buy a bag at CVS. The point of Halloween is to get dressed up, knock on the door of a house belonging to people you may not know, say "trick or treat," and THEN get candy. People always complain about kids who don't play by the rules--kids who don't dress up, kids who don't say anything, etc. But adults who just dump a bowl of candy in front of the door are just as bad. How would you feel if you took your kids trick or treating and found that everyone had gone out, just leaving candy on the doorstep? That would be kind of a bust.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why you'd put the bowl out anyway. Halloween is supposed to be about the interaction between trick or treaters and neighbors. Not an opportunity to collect candy in the abstract.
And I don't understand what is so hard to understand. We put a bowl of candy out with a note to please take two pieces each because my family enjoys trick or treating as a family. Neither my husband nor I want to be left at home while the other is having fun with our kids, seeing our neighbors and friends. Yet, we want to make sure that those trick or treating can collect some candy. It is really quite simple.
Ok then as long as you understand a kid will likely take the whole bowl, fine. you broke the social compact of "trick or treat" and so you got a trick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why you'd put the bowl out anyway. Halloween is supposed to be about the interaction between trick or treaters and neighbors. Not an opportunity to collect candy in the abstract.
And I don't understand what is so hard to understand. We put a bowl of candy out with a note to please take two pieces each because my family enjoys trick or treating as a family. Neither my husband nor I want to be left at home while the other is having fun with our kids, seeing our neighbors and friends. Yet, we want to make sure that those trick or treating can collect some candy. It is really quite simple.