Trunk or Treat is a fairly new development in the US. I hadn’t heard about it until this year, but apparently it's 'a thing' started by churches in the Nineties & put on by an organization, be it a church or Parent Teacher Association or other community group. I've got friends in other places who rave about them but honestly, it kind of weirds me out. As IW mentioned, it's pretty much the opposite of the whole 'don't take candy from strangers' thing. I drove by one advertised on a big commercial-grade sign the other day, and I was Very Excited. I called the folks in my world who love it to let them know I’d seen one, but it’s not a thing I’ll be participating in.
When I was a child, all the kids dressed and most of the parents did too. One parent takes the kids trick-or-treating and the other stays home and hands out candy. It was an opportunity for moms and later their kids to show off. You dress your family and home and compete in the most polite of ways. The best costumes are almost always homemade. As a young man I certainly appreciated the costume parties; most gals go as some flavor of slutty and often coordinate their partner’s costume with their own. As an adult…well. I have Opinions.
These days much of the ‘magic’ of Halloween and many other holidays has been lost due to commercialization. Rather than candlelight illuminating delightfully carved individual pumpkins and paper bags and all sorts of other things, it’s large inflatable decorations you stick on your front lawn and e-z yard illuminations that project an image or several onto your house. Even the tiny pumpkins and other unique things folks used to light their driveways to beckon you towards their house are now replaced by plastic lantern yard stakes with LEDs in practically whatever shape you desire. It’s a lot easier to spend X dollars on the internet and have costumes & decorations shipped to your door than it is to spend weeks or months planning and organizing and creating. It’s a lot less work. But to me, it’s less fun.
Halloween is an important part of the changing of the seasons. First you cut a circle out of the top of a pumpkin, then you scoop out the insides, then you carve the pumpkins, and lastly you make & bake pumpkin pie with what you scooped out with your own two hands. ‘Pumpkin Pie Season’ lasts from whenever you start carving pumpkins in October until sometime in December when you run out of Thanksgiving leftovers. Pumpkin pie is a seasonal dish to me; one enjoyed for a portion of the year and very rarely afterwards. With the advent of canning you can buy pumpkin pie filling practically anytime, but I refuse to.
Halloween starts the holiday ramp-up; next comes Thanksgiving, the US harvest festival and then comes Christmas. There will be Turkey and Cranberry Sauce and casseroles and green beans and root vegetables and some sort of Vegetable Soup. There are decorating opportunities for all of these; there are Expectations. My slave made a big deal out of all of these and I sort of miss it. *smiles wistfully*