Not Me
That malicious neighbor kid up the street, the one that will eventually wind up in jail a petty thief and drug dealer. I think he’s the one that kicked my outside pumpkin, crumbling it, when we ran out of candy a couple years ago.
You can tell I have mixed emotions about Halloween. This started as a pre-Christian pagan harvest festival. Today, kids dress in costumes, some portraying a Middle Ages Hungarian count who never had fangs or flew as a bat, but impaled victims on stakes up their you-know-what. Modern kids beg candy door to door from neighbors so they can rot their molars just prior to the financially strapping parental obligation of teeth-straightening braces.
It all makes perfect sense to me.
But I’m not venturing out this year to accompany my daughter. My wife can.
I should have known better last year. We were making the rounds and even though tiny Kyle (a neighbor boy) had tripped in a dark hole running to a front door for candy, scraped his chin and was crying despite my soothing words----things were proceeding well enough.
There was that thrown water balloon, launched by an unknown hand, but it missed us by at least 30 feet.
A group of kids approached and I was joking around trying to ease Kyle’s pain by taking his mind off his recent fall. There were a bunch of kids dressed up in the usual get-ups, Frankenstein, the were-wolf, Dracula (for some reason I always think he’s gay), the mummy. One of the kids, short and tubby, had the poorest-looking costume I ever saw, kind of like a bed-sheet made into a dress.
Boy, I thought, you could do better than that.
I came up, put my hand on the kid’s tummy, playfully thumped it and said, “Pretty neat suit. What you got in there, a pillow?”
But what I felt wasn’t a pillow. It was real skin. It was a short fat woman, dressed in a real dress, accompanying children like I was.
She hauled off and hit me right in the stomach…..hard.
I gasped, “I’m sorry. I thought you had a pillow in there.”
She angrily mumbled, “I’m a woman,” and stomped away.
I walked for a full block----bent-over. Kyle consoled me. The woman could hit as hard (and was about the same height) as Rocky Marciano.
That’s it. I’ve had it.”
Copyright 2006 by SammonSays.com