Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

However

In the first few weeks following Hurricane Florence, people outside of Wilmington often asked if things were back to normal. Despite the good intentions behind the question, I found it irritating, although I struggled to figure out why. As time went on, I became better at responding to the question and began to understand my own frustration. To the rest of the world, life had moved on, and there were other, hotter topics to cover in the news. However, even as we began to return to regular routines like going to work and school, they just weren't the same as before the hurricane.

Although I began going in to work shortly after we returned from our evacuation vacation, the university officially reopened to faculty and staff on October 1. October was an interesting month at work as everyone caught up with each other, we discovered just how many people lost their homes (three on my team of just under 60, which seems to be about average), and people attempted to juggle their regular work, catching up on work from a three week closure, and hurricane-related tasks. Many had worked obscenely long hours to clean up the campus, and it looked fantastic as we welcomed back students the following week. However, there were still plenty of reminders that we were in a construction zone, where countless buildings need significant repairs including full roof replacements and the main science building and the campus apartments are still unusable. Hurricane Michael also gave us a scare, and we were all given a sobering reminder of what a direct hit from a Category 4 storm (the forecast for Florence at the time the university closed) looked like, and for a short while the conversations became, "I hate to say we were lucky, but we were lucky!"

Utility trucks outside Kenan Auditorium in early October.

The kids also went back to school in October. Jewel's school follows the traditional calendar, and she was the first to go back. Our schools are overcrowded, and before the hurricane five of her eight classes were in trailers. However, the school lost the trailers in the storm, and she found her classes all temporarily relocated into spaces formerly used for electives like the art room, computer lab, etc. The girls spent one afternoon sorting out toys after they found out that one of Jewel's teachers lost not only her classroom, but her home, and the girls wanted to donate toys to the teacher's three children who are ages five to nine. Of course the girls didn't exactly sort out any prize possessions, but, hey, it's the thought that counts.

The three stooges went back a little over a week later due to the hurricane days going right into their scheduled fall break. They ended up being out of school for five weeks, their longest break since the summer between preschool and kindergarten. We had not heard anything about their classrooms, so the boys expected to go right back to their classroom, which had been in a trailer. However, on the first day back, they were told to pack their belongings, and they are now having class in the library and are learning how to work in a temporary space. 

We also had conversations with the kids to help prepare them for the fact that there are now homeless students, teachers, and staff. On the first day back, Mike took a gift card to a former teacher who lost her home. As far as we know, though, our schools were relatively lucky. The smaller school district to our north now has hundreds of homeless students.

Halloween happened in October, just like it does every year. The kids wanted to put up Halloween decorations the first weekend of the month. However, I hesitated. Our neighborhood had a good deal of damage. Most of the houses on our street need new roofs. During the storm our neighbor who lives two houses away kayaked down our street and discovered the water was waist high at the other end of our street. Needless to say, many houses also have extensive water damage, and I felt insensitive putting up frivolous decorations when others were going through such hardships. But once I noticed Halloween decorations peeking out from behind debris, the kids and I went ahead and decorated outside.  

I actually ended up with no pictures of our house, but can you spot our neighbors' decorations?

We warned the kids that trick-or-treating would probably be different this year and that it was okay if they didn't get the usual amount of candy, because they always get too much. And trick-or-treating was different as we had to navigate around roofers and piles of debris. However, people's generosity was amazing. On our street, there are still three displaced families who cannot return to their homes. One of them still put out a bowl of candy with a sign that said, "Please take two." The kids loved this - everyone says to take one. No one ever says to take two. Another displaced neighbor spent the evening staging work in his driveway so that he could hand out candy before heading inside to continue work on his home. About a third of the houses in our neighborhood were handing out candy, which is about half of the normal rate. But at nearly every house the kids went to, people were very generous, and the kids ended up coming home with at least as much candy as they collected in previous years. Despite what so many people are going through, it was as though there was a collective need to stop and make things, well, normal, at least for one night. And it felt good.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Halloween

Back when we lived in Athens, and way before we had children, we used to host an annual New Year's party. It was the one time of year one group of our friends all got together. Most of our guests came from out of town and stayed at our house, and the party usually lasted until at least January 2nd. These days things are much tamer and kiddo centered. Yet, despite that, there are many aspects of our annual trick or treat party that are rather similar to the old New Year's parties.

We start by just inviting a few good friends. There are many great things about good friends, and one of them is they never care that our house looks like real life.These are the kind of friends who will step over the giant dog fur balls that pile up and who will happily cart the huge pile of clean laundry from the couch to our bedroom so they have a place to sit. So we could completely get away with not cleaning. But the irony is this is the one group of friends that we actually want to clean the house for. For our old New Year's parties, we were often in the middle of a last minute power-clean when the guests started arriving, and I have distinct memories of the vacuum being the focal point of our living room for the first hour of our party one year. This year's Halloween gathering was no different. Despite having to leave for the boys' soccer game at 10:00, I still managed to sweep and mop most of the house on Saturday morning before we went. (And I folded and put away the several loads of laundry that were on the couch and even cleaned up the dishes in the kitchen from dinner the night before and from breakfast. Who said nothing good came out of the kids getting me up at 5:30 every day?)

We were always at the store at the last minute buying food and drinks for our New Year's parties. This year was no different, and after the soccer game the whole family made a trip to Costco to stock up on food. We came home, I put that away, and then I headed back to Walmart to get a few more things. And oddly, the food is about the same. For the trick-or-treat party, I served a fancy menu of chicken nuggets and french fries. I usually prepared about the same for drunk people.

On New Year's Eve we would stay at our house until midnight and then head uptown to the bars. Because of this, the women, at least, would dress up for the occasion. (No comments on the male attire!) Of course, Halloween is no different. You gotta dress up! Even the grown ups dress up to take the kids out. This year Ree was a girl from the 80s, Leon was Luigi from Super Mario Brothers, Michael was Michelangelo from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and Natalia was Anna from Frozen.

Finally, on New Year's Eve, after all that fun, somewhat always passed out in a crazy place. This year Halloween was no different.

Monday, October 26, 2015

Pumpkins

Normally, I love fall. I love all four seasons, and I love the change of seasons. But this year, I haven't been very excited about fall. I think I still want to squeeze in more summer!

That hasn't stopped us from doing fall activities, though. One of our favorites is our annual pumpkin painting. I'm not quite sure how it came to be, but for the past few years in lieu of carving a pumpkin, the kids have each painted their own little pumpkin. They even have a favorite pumpkin patch they like to go to, and they know to look for the "pie pumpkins." 

Over fall break we went to Stone Mountain near Atlanta, and they had pumpkins painted like all kinds of characters - Star Wars, Frozen, and lots and lots of Minions. Leon must have been inspired, because as we were planning our painting this year he said, "I'm going to take it up a notch. Each year I've just painted a design, but this year I'm going to paint a face."

After buying out most of the craft paint at Walmart, the kids spent last Sunday afternoon engaged in some serious pumpkin painting. The pumpkins turned out cute, even if they weren't quite as fancy as the ones at Stone Mountain. 

Oh, and we managed to get a beach trip in this Sunday. I realized it was the first time I felt sand between my toes since we had friends visit in mid-September. It was wonderful. And now I'm almost ready for fall...



Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Trick-or-Treat Part I – R’s Adventures

After Halloween last year, I went shopping and I got the cutest witch costume on sale for R. It was a little black dress with purple ruffles and matching hat. I thought it was a perfect toddler Halloween outfit. A few weeks ago, I stumbled upon this costume as we were getting out R’s fall clothes. I was excited to see them again. I showed R the dress and hat. She took one look at them and said, “No.” There was no emotion over it, just a quick, “no,” as in, no, that is not the dress for me. I tried a sales pitch, and I tried talking about Halloween, but, “no” it remained.

As luck would have it, later that week I had lunch with another mom at work, shared my story, and she just smiled. Her youngest is a super girlie girl and she had just the purple princess dress for us to borrow for Halloween. I was quite happy about that. And when I took the dress home to R, she loved it. She wanted to touch it and hold it and stroke it. So I let her try it on. She did not want to wear it. At all. As soon as I got it on, she took it off. The next night when I got home from work she grabbed my hand, dragged me to the closet, and begged to see the purple princess dress. She wanted to touch it and hold it and stroke it. She did not want to wear it. She didn’t even let me get it over her head this time.

Last Wednesday night I took R to a Halloween carnival at UNCW. It was a huge, chaotic event hosted for all area youth 12 and under, and it was free. The place was out of control, and it was filled with kids of all ages in all sorts of costumes. R loved it, and she was very happy to wear her regular clothes, despite the other kids being dressed up.

On Thursday, Jeff tried a new tactic. He asked R if she wanted to dress up like Abby from Sesame Street. Abby is a new character, and R worships her. She is a fairy with a wand and pig tails. What more could a girl want? By the time I got home from work on Thursday, R was very excited about dressing up like Abby. She was going to wear a fairy dress (the same purple princess dress) and carry a wand (the same princess wand), and she was going to say trick-or-treat. (I wish I could remember how she said it. It was quite cute!)

On Friday morning, she was still very excited. I had a regular check up on the babies scheduled, so while I headed off for that, she and Jeff ate breakfast and planned for the day. She remained very excited about dressing up like Abby, and we were quite excited that we could, once again, use our child to get us a nice supply of candy!

The plans for the day changed when I ended up checking in to the Mommy Hotel for the weekend (more on that in Trick-or Treat Part II). I told Jeff they still needed to go, since she was finally excited about trick-or-treating. He got her dressed up, which I imagine must’ve been quite an ordeal, and they headed off for the neighbor’s house. She got half way across the yard before she started pulling on her dress, trying to rip it off. This was not okay. This was not what she wanted to do. She wanted to put her regular clothes back on.

So that is what she did. They headed inside, she changed into her regular clothes, then our little grandma happily put candy in the buckets of all the kids who came by. For R, handing out candy in her regular clothes every time she heard "ding dong" was a perfect Halloween.