yes, how dare kids want to participate in an activity for kids. they should spend the night inside learning how to file their taxes.
i’m with the “just give them the candy” crowd. if they’re still in school, it’s fair, they can decide for themselves when they want to opt out. i think the last year i went out was 9th grade. i’ve never really experienced the packs of uncostumed teens running around, but things do vary by neighborhood.
I live in a small, very safe town. Anyone not wearing a costume was required to sing Justin Bieber’s “Baby” before receiving treats (yes, that includes mothers carrying infants… grrr). It was an effective strategy, and will definitely make a nice YouTube video next year. I’m sure that is not a solution in most neighborhoods, but it might be entertaining to some.
Last night was our delayed Trick or Treat night, and two women came to my door, in costume. One was at least 60, the other in her thirties. I thought the older one was helping a small child up the stairs, but there were no children. And it wasn’t a mask/makeup making her look old…she was genuinely older than me! At least they had some attempt at a costume on! And not a pillowcase…a 13-gallon white kitchen garbage can bag with a drawstring! That is the oldest person I’ve ever had come to the door! And we had maybe only three teens last night, and they were on the lower end of the age spectrum, and in costume. I give everybody candy…you go out on a cold rainy night and be polite, you get three snack-size treats. I should have given more…I had candy leftover.
I just give them my best “really?” look and whatever we’re handing out that year. I have no emotional investment in this thing. The only kid I had an issue with last year looked at what he was given and said “Clif Bars? Lame!” I said, “Oh, wait a second. . .”, reached into his bag and took it back. This year was candy, so no complaints. A few years ago, we had a lone adult woman come to the door; no costume, just a bag, no kids with her. It’s the only time I’ve said no.
Where in that quote does it indicate that Lynn had a problem with polite teens dressed up in costume?
Uh - except for the fact that the OP is more than a subject line, and the very first sentence of the OP is “which is the best bogus treat to give teenagers who come to the door looking for candy even though they don’t even have a damn costume on?” Teens without a costume has nothing to do with teens with a costume on. Right? That’s the way the word “don’t” still works, right?
Again, I don’t see any posts up to that point that indicate people wanting to give teens shitty candy just for being teens. What I DO see is people wanting to give teens who don’t dress up shitty candy.
Well, if you have no problem with teens coming without costumes, I can understand giving them candy. But if you do have a problem with it, not doing anything about it is stupid.
And isn’t the trick part of Halloween entirely vestigial? I’ve only heard about that stuff in books. Down here, at least, you might get shot at.
I keep a bunch of dollar-store masks for the kids with no costume. A fifteen-year-old with no costume, to whom candy is valuable enough to still go door-to-door asking for it? This is a kid with problems that won’t get fixed by a few old farts expressing disapproval.
So I give 'em a choice of mask, and then a handful of candy. Don’t make their lives any harder, OK?
Lynn is not the OP. She is not the one asking “What’s the best way to stick it to teenage "trick or treaters"? “ or “*which is the best bogus treat to give teenagers who come to the door looking for candy even though they don’t even have a damn costume on?" *
She simply stated that High School kids should start weaning themselves from the trappings of little-kid-dom. And, she’s right.
If you trace the quote back you’ll see I was responding to someone who said “did anyone in this thread think it’s wrong for teens to T or T”. And I said yes: Lynn did. I don’t think you need to White Knight her for me accurately reporting her position in response to a direct question. Whether she’s right or not is irrelevant.
I love Halloween, even the no-costumed teenagers. I give out gobs of candy to all trick or treaters. And if they tell me my dog is cute, they get another handful.