Anonymous wrote:I always thought it was because those people buy candy late and full size bars are the only ones left.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We give away two liter bottles of soda. OP would have an aneurysm.
Our street has a cooler for adults we know. OP would narc out our cul de sac
No, I’d be in to that, but go on with your assumptions.
Going above and beyond for adult joy 👍
Going above and beyond for child joy 🙅‍♀️
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We give away two liter bottles of soda. OP would have an aneurysm.
Our street has a cooler for adults we know. OP would narc out our cul de sac
No, I’d be in to that, but go on with your assumptions.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This thread is hilarious. I do love candy corn, for the record, but I don’t give it out. I buy good candy—no pretzels, no raisins—but fun sized. Yes, it’s a terrible value, ounce for ounce. But when I see the haul that my kids come home with—like an absolutely insane volume of candy—it just makes me wonder why she people feel the need to get the exact same product everyone else is giving out, just bigger. It still doesn’t make sense to me, even after reading all your replies. It would seem generous if no one else was giving out candy, or chocolate, but it’s just bigger and more expensive. On top of a mountain of the exact same stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We give away two liter bottles of soda. OP would have an aneurysm.
Our street has a cooler for adults we know. OP would narc out our cul de sac
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full sized candy bars are the Holy Grail of trick-or-treating. Why not make a kid's evening, if you have the means?
Exactly this! My kids still talk about the 1 house in our old neighborhood that gave out full sized candy bars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This thread is hilarious. I do love candy corn, for the record, but I don’t give it out. I buy good candy—no pretzels, no raisins—but fun sized. Yes, it’s a terrible value, ounce for ounce. But when I see the haul that my kids come home with—like an absolutely insane volume of candy—it just makes me wonder why she people feel the need to get the exact same product everyone else is giving out, just bigger. It still doesn’t make sense to me, even after reading all your replies. It would seem generous if no one else was giving out candy, or chocolate, but it’s just bigger and more expensive. On top of a mountain of the exact same stuff.
Your poor kids.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This thread is hilarious. I do love candy corn, for the record, but I don’t give it out. I buy good candy—no pretzels, no raisins—but fun sized. Yes, it’s a terrible value, ounce for ounce. But when I see the haul that my kids come home with—like an absolutely insane volume of candy—it just makes me wonder why she people feel the need to get the exact same product everyone else is giving out, just bigger. It still doesn’t make sense to me, even after reading all your replies. It would seem generous if no one else was giving out candy, or chocolate, but it’s just bigger and more expensive. On top of a mountain of the exact same stuff.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This thread is hilarious. I do love candy corn, for the record, but I don’t give it out. I buy good candy—no pretzels, no raisins—but fun sized. Yes, it’s a terrible value, ounce for ounce. But when I see the haul that my kids come home with—like an absolutely insane volume of candy—it just makes me wonder why she people feel the need to get the exact same product everyone else is giving out, just bigger. It still doesn’t make sense to me, even after reading all your replies. It would seem generous if no one else was giving out candy, or chocolate, but it’s just bigger and more expensive. On top of a mountain of the exact same stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The gigantic box of them were on sale at Costco.
OP here. That’s the only reply so far that makes sense. Thank you.