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Posts Tagged ‘halloween’

Bunky’s Grumpkins

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 207 Comments › )
Filed under Art, Humor, Open thread at October 31st, 2010 - 11:00 pm

Several years ago there were a lot of trick-or-treaters roaming our neighborhood, and we’d go all out, with spider webs, dry ice, and Tom Waits’ “Bone Machine” echoing through the neighborhood.

I’m proud to say that my grumpkins made dogs bark and little kids cry.

These days the number of trick-or-treaters have declined, and most of the Halloweeners are comprised of a couple of vans of pre-teens who speak only Spanish and wear what can barely pass for a costume.

This year was the first year that I considered leaving the front light off, until the missus brought home a pumpkin. It’s now a bit after 3PM PST as of this writing, but it’ll be 11PM EST soon enough, so I better get to carving so I can post this year’s grumpkin on the Overnight Open Thread.

How to Carve a Pumpkin

by 1389AD ( 112 Comments › )
Filed under Humor, Weapons at October 31st, 2010 - 6:00 pm

Scroll down for the Week 8 NFL Thread below


How to carve a pumpkin, using a Glock!


Scroll down for the Week 8 NFL Thread below


On The Eve of Samhain, Feralia & Hallowmas

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 271 Comments › )
Filed under Elections, Elections 2010, History, Humor, Open thread, Religion at October 30th, 2010 - 11:00 pm

Found some nice Halloween history trivia here:

Halloween, celebrated each year on October 31, is a mix of ancient Celtic practices, Catholic  and Roman religious rituals and European folk traditions that blended together over time to create the holiday we know today. Straddling the line between fall and winter, plenty and paucity and life and death, Halloween is a time of celebration and superstition. Halloween has long been thought of as a day when the dead can return to the earth, and ancient Celts would light bonfires and wear costumes to ward off these roaming ghosts. The Celtic holiday of Samhain, the Catholic Hallowmas period of All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day and the Roman festival of Feralia all influenced the modern holiday of Halloween. In the 19th century, Halloween began to lose its religious connotation, becoming a more secular community-based children’s holiday.

But what about the Halloween traditions and beliefs that today’s trick-or-treaters have forgotten all about? Many of these obsolete rituals focused on the future instead of the past and the living instead of the dead. In particular, many had to do with helping young women identify their future husbands and reassuring them that they would someday–with luck, by next Halloween!–be married.

In 18th-century Ireland, a matchmaking cook might bury a ring in her mashed potatoes on Halloween night, hoping to bring true love to the diner who found it. In Scotland, fortune-tellers recommended that an eligible young woman name a hazelnut for each of her suitors and then toss the nuts into the fireplace. The nut that burned to ashes rather than popping or exploding, the story went, represented the girl’s future husband. (In some versions of this legend, confusingly, the opposite was true: The nut that burned away symbolized a love that would not last.) Another tale had it that if a young woman ate a sugary concoction made out of walnuts, hazelnuts and nutmeg before bed on Halloween night, she would dream about her future husband. Young women tossed apple-peels over their shoulders, hoping that the peels would fall on the floor in the shape of their future husbands’ initials; tried to learn about their futures by peering at egg yolks floating in a bowl of water; and stood in front of mirrors in darkened rooms, holding candles and looking over their shoulders for their husbands’ faces.

Now before anyone accuses me of ignoring El Dia de los Muertos (the Day of the Dead), that’s November 2nd. It’s especially appropriate for this election year, as that’s the day we’ll observe the passing of the politically dead from the world of governance into the hallowed realm of the private sector.

Guess which ska-leton above is a liberal.

And while everyone is pondering ancient Celtic/Roman/Catholic rituals, are you pondering what I’m pondering? I’m pondering an Overnight Open Thread.

All Hallows Eve … bwahahaha!

by Kafir ( 225 Comments › )
Filed under Open thread at October 31st, 2009 - 3:30 pm

Dead Man’s Party, by Oingo Boingo

Waiting for an invitation to arrive

Going to a party where no one’s still alive

It’s a dead man’s party, who could ask for more?

Everybody’s coming, leave your body at the door

Video requested/suggested by
Blogmocracy Citizen… CloudyDay