Friday, August 21, 2020
Why I Despise Halloween
Why I Despise Halloween Why I Despise Halloween As a high-strung introvert, the idea of knocking on peopleâs doors to goad strangers into giving me free candy never particularly appealed to me when I was younger. Even when I did try to join in on the fun, and believe me I tried, I never seemed to get it right anyway. I donât despise Halloween just because I was the only third-grader in my school to show up without a pumpkin to the annual mandatory giant pumpkin contest. And no, itâs not because it brings back the mortification and self loathing of having overwatered smothered in love my miserable little pumpkin seed into oblivion. And no, I donât take my seedâs failure to germinate personally. Ok, maybe a bit. But also Halloween is dumb. Before you dismiss my unpopular opinion with a casual âGod, Freud would have a field day with youâ, please note that Halloweenâs a deeply unpleasant experience for many people. Itâs not just me. The search âwhy i hate halloweenâ generates 31.2 million results on Google, which if you ask me is unsurprising. From kids egging your car to folks dressing up as brutal dictators or Pocahontas, the whole thingâs a bloody nightmare. âGaddafiâ by Paul Stein?, taken on October? ?31?, ?2011 at a Halloween parade in Soho, New York Iâm not one to reject hollow commercial holidays just because theyâre big business. After all, I get my boyfriend a box of champagne truffles every year on February 14 because he bloody loves champagne truffles. In fact, as a quick sidebar, Iâve never understood couples who reject Valentineâs Day. Theyâre the type of people who never take their kids to Disneyland because itâs hollow and artificial, despite how utterly happy and excited it would make their children. While Valentineâs Day and every other commercialized holiday is bae, Halloween is dogshit. Appealing to our basest instincts, Halloweenâs basically a celebration of gore and fear and humanityâs lowest common denominators. Itâs the season of bad taste, of white people dressed in Navajo costumes or covered in fake blood riding on the subway. Itâs full of shockingly offensive things like Knottâs Berry Farmâs mental-ward themed Virtual Reality game, and seems to be a holiday with complete disregard for how uncomfortable people might find it. Imagine having undergone a real-life traumatic experience, only to have flashbacks brought on by a bunch of drunk frat boys covered in fake blood. Call me a snowflake, but I really donât think trauma victims should have to deal with the psychological fallout of seeing people dressed as corpses walking down the street. Another thing that bugs me is the weird societal assumption that women should want to dress up as sexy versions of non-sexy things, like Ken Bone or pizza rat, to attend whatever college Halloween night they had the misfortune of going to. I get that people need to get laid, but â" and I say this without the slightest intention to slut-shame â" if youâre going to choose to dress up as a rat dragging a slice of pizza in the NY subway, why not just accept that you wonât be remembered for your fine body? Also, not to mention, Halloween is rude as f***. At the risk of sounding like Ayn Rand (the author of The Fountainhead and cursed mother of libertarianism in America), why canât kids buy their own candy, rather than bother nice sensible people staying in on a weeknight? And why must trick-or-treaters resort to extortion? Asking anyone for anything without saying âpleaseâ is rude enough. Call me boring but this year, Iâm staying in on Halloween with the seventh season of The West Wing, and Iâm certainly not opening the door to any rude children.
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