Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't feel any need to accommodate something this parent is choosing to inflict on their kids. It's her burden to figure out. Why doesn't she take the kids out to do something else, even out to dinner etc, so they aren't just staring out windows and crying? There will be other ppl passing by to ToT.
+1 OP is kind but this isn’t her problem.
Honestly the people who object to Halloween on “religious grounds” are so ridiculous. This wasn’t even a thing when I was a kid.
I never met a non-TOT family as a kid, but it's always been a thing. JW, Pentecostal, evangelical Christians, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are your kids the only trick or treaters on your block? If they are going to see kids anyway your abstention only makes you feel better.
Which is a perfectly valid reason to do so.
It’s performative and something she can pat herself on her back. It makes absolutely no difference to that other family.
What a sad little life you must lead with that kind of thinking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are your kids the only trick or treaters on your block? If they are going to see kids anyway your abstention only makes you feel better.
Which is a perfectly valid reason to do so.
It’s performative and something she can pat herself on her back. It makes absolutely no difference to that other family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't feel any need to accommodate something this parent is choosing to inflict on their kids. It's her burden to figure out. Why doesn't she take the kids out to do something else, even out to dinner etc, so they aren't just staring out windows and crying? There will be other ppl passing by to ToT.
+1 OP is kind but this isn’t her problem.
Honestly the people who object to Halloween on “religious grounds” are so ridiculous. This wasn’t even a thing when I was a kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are your kids the only trick or treaters on your block? If they are going to see kids anyway your abstention only makes you feel better.
Which is a perfectly valid reason to do so.
Anonymous wrote:Are your kids the only trick or treaters on your block? If they are going to see kids anyway your abstention only makes you feel better.
Anonymous wrote:Neighbor’s children and my children are best friends. They don’t believe in Halloween due to religion. We do celebrate Halloween. Without fail the past two years they will come over before TOT starts and ask me if I can give them a piece of candy. I tell them to go ask mom and if she says ok, then I grab a handful of candy for each of them (4 kids). Her oldest will even pretend to have a costume on to try to celebrate just a little without getting in trouble. He brought one of his footballs to the door and told me he was a football player. She later stopped by and told me she had found out he dressed up and sent him back inside.
Once kids start going door to door her kids all cry. Inconsolable tears type crying and they watch from her windows. We are in row homes so the houses connect. My kids in turn feel bad that their friends are sad and cannot come out to trick or treat with them.
This year I planned to go to a neighborhood over just to give them a break from the past two years of tears and upset. A break on both sides, no one has to feel bad and no one has to feel sad about the other.
This morning I woke up and I’m asking myself - Am I doing too much? For background I’m an only child who often feels sad for people because of my own childhood sadness/loneliness that I’m working thru and never want anyone to feel left out or ostracized.