Anonymous wrote:What's honey boo boo up to in 2019?
Anonymous wrote:Well this is awkward, OP. I think you might actually be the "weird" neighbor here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP as usual you had to know the snark would be over the top. I'll make you feel better. You seem sensitive, sweet and your kids are young. "We've been boo'd" is actually a very diplomatic way of saying she doesn't want bags of candy on her porch. PPs are right. She doesn't want to announce her house is empty. It's not personal, so shake it off.
To make you smile...here's a timeline of how this goes. In my neighborhood, boo'ing was a rite of passage since kids were trekking down long, dark (scary) driveways. By middle school, kids did it with gross bag contents and funny, scary notes. At this point, we blew them away with air horns. Sadly, it attracted more tweens. By HS, 9th graders hopped the gate to boo and my very well placed husband in IT clown costume did the trick. Snap chat maps location made it easy to know when they were close.Think one kid sprained his ankle trying to get away over gate. We don't like him anyway, was great fun! Happy Halloween!
Were you trying to make the OP feel better by demonstrating that she isn't the weirdest person on this thread? If so, mission accomplished.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pro booing, anti all after sports snacks for little kids.
Most of our events were early in the morning and everyone was going out to lunch after. Crap like this and goody bags at elementary for every event/holiday/party help grow entitled kids.
Despite this my kids and I loved booing. Any excuse to get outside in the fall and run around the neighborhood was a great idea to us.
Where do you get the "I've been Booed" signs?
This is also what I wonder.
There are tons that you can print out online.
Do a google image search or go on Pinterest if you want it to be really pretty. Or you take a marker and piece of paper and write “we’ve been Booed!” and you tape it to your front door.
Don’t overthink it.
No. You get the "We've been Boo'd" sign from the person who boo's you. Then you make two new ones to boo two other families. Come on, people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread has me literally crying and falling off my chair with laughter. Just want to say that.
And thanks, because I really needed this today.
Same here. This could become a DCUM classic.
Anonymous wrote:I still cant believe this site is free
Anonymous wrote:Just let the kids trick or treat on Halloween. Maybe invite a friend or two to the pumpkin patch or over to watch the Charlie Brown Halloween while you carve pumpkins.
But this very public "I've Been Boo'd" signage is a bit much. In my opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a neighbor a few doors down who seems nice, usually. A little stand-offish sometimes. Her girls and my boys play together nicely when they see each other.
She was packing up her car on Friday, and I asked if she needed me to look out for packages or anything. She said no thank you, just a short trip, got it covered, etc.
I was walking our dog later and noticed that they had put up a "We've Been Boo-ed" sign that was definitely not there when they were packing up. My boys and I usually do the first "Boos" of the season, and always get their house, because their girls are so nice and cute.
I get that they don't want to participate, but she could have said something or posted a sign that was like "please don't Boo us"; they definitely were not Booed, because no other house on our street that has kids has the sign up! I'm just bummed. It's not like I would have left it on their porch all weekend, knowing they were gone.
If she is a few doors down then let her next-door neighbors watch for packages or anything. She probably thinks, as I do, that you are the nosy neighborhood roving windbag. You are not the Big Boo Boss. I'll bet she cringed Friday when she saw you coming. You were hoping to find out where she was going, didn't you?