Anonymous wrote:I suspect there is a huge overlap in the pro-booing crowd and the pro-soccer snacks for everyone including siblings crowd.
Both crowds have way too much free time.
Anonymous wrote:I suspect there is a huge overlap in the pro-booing crowd and the pro-soccer snacks for everyone including siblings crowd.
Both crowds have way too much free time.
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.
Anonymous wrote:I suspect there is a huge overlap in the pro-booing crowd and the pro-soccer snacks for everyone including siblings crowd.
Both crowds have way too much free time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, maybe they were already boo'd -- maybe by someone in the neighborhood, maybe by a friend, whomever.
Maybe they were pre-empting the bag sitting there unanswered, just as an advertisement for a B&E. You say they should have told you, and you wouldn't boo them. But what about everyone else? Were you going to tell everyone for them then keep reminding them in case someone forgot? or were you going to check every day to make sure no bags accumulated, then boo back for them, or what?
Jesus. The woman just wanted to go on vacation, and yes, a sign was simplest.
This is not a tradition in our neighborhood so I'm a little confused. Does the person who is boo'd know who boo'd them? If not, then she couldn't have told you to wait.
She didn't want a bag sitting there and also didn't want to let down the next person in the chain. Or she was boo'd by someone else.
Either way not something worth getting upset about.
I think -- but am not sure -- that someone gets the bag of stuff, and then is supposed to visibly mark they've already been hit. And then they send a bag of stuff to someone without the visible mark, and so on and so on, until everyone has participated.
I'd rather light my eyes on fire from the nearest gas burner, but there it is.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a WOHM and don't participate in Boo-ing anymore, but not because of the "oh I have no time and am oh-so-busy factor"; it's not actually that taxing to buy some candy/crap and put it in a bag with a note, etc.
What I hate about it (and why I stopped passing it on) is the environmental factor. We just don't need or use more Cheap Plastic Crap. It's enough, already. Kids get enough junk between the school parties/neighborhood parade/actual H'ween night. No mas!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, maybe they were already boo'd -- maybe by someone in the neighborhood, maybe by a friend, whomever.
Maybe they were pre-empting the bag sitting there unanswered, just as an advertisement for a B&E. You say they should have told you, and you wouldn't boo them. But what about everyone else? Were you going to tell everyone for them then keep reminding them in case someone forgot? or were you going to check every day to make sure no bags accumulated, then boo back for them, or what?
Jesus. The woman just wanted to go on vacation, and yes, a sign was simplest.
This is not a tradition in our neighborhood so I'm a little confused. Does the person who is boo'd know who boo'd them? If not, then she couldn't have told you to wait.
She didn't want a bag sitting there and also didn't want to let down the next person in the chain. Or she was boo'd by someone else.
Either way not something worth getting upset about.
Anonymous wrote:WTF IS BOOING?!?! OP I have no idea what the he** you are talking about, it made zero sense.
Anonymous wrote:Don't parents still take their kids to the pumpkin patch or on haunted hay rides? What about the ghost train at Burke Lake or a haunted house?
That's the stuff that kids LOVE!
Anonymous wrote:OP, maybe they were already boo'd -- maybe by someone in the neighborhood, maybe by a friend, whomever.
Maybe they were pre-empting the bag sitting there unanswered, just as an advertisement for a B&E. You say they should have told you, and you wouldn't boo them. But what about everyone else? Were you going to tell everyone for them then keep reminding them in case someone forgot? or were you going to check every day to make sure no bags accumulated, then boo back for them, or what?
Jesus. The woman just wanted to go on vacation, and yes, a sign was simplest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a WOHM and don't participate in Boo-ing anymore, but not because of the "oh I have no time and am oh-so-busy factor"; it's not actually that taxing to buy some candy/crap and put it in a bag with a note, etc.
What I hate about it (and why I stopped passing it on) is the environmental factor. We just don't need or use more Cheap Plastic Crap. It's enough, already. Kids get enough junk between the school parties/neighborhood parade/actual H'ween night. No mas!
Yeah, I don't get the impression that these "Boo" treats consist of a pack of candy corn thrown on someone's doorstep. These parents (let's admit it - MOMs!) put together elaborate treat bags and expect their neighbors to do the same for their kid.