Categories
Selected Articles

My family hands out candy — and hot dogs — for Halloween. This year, my husband plans to grill 200 for trick-or-treaters.

The author's husband shows off his grilling skills.
The author said that her husband grills hot dogs for neighbors on Halloween night.

  • When we had kids, my husband and I decided to make Halloween our biggest holiday celebration.
  • It has allowed us to create our own family traditions around a holiday that has fewer expectations.
  • My husband passes out hot dogs to the neighborhood. This Halloween, he’s grilling 200 of them.

When you get married, holidays can get tricky.

My husband and I live in Florida, his parents live about four hours away, and mine are in Ohio. When our first holiday season as a married couple rolled around, everyone wanted us to travel to them and continue the traditions we’d been doing since we were kids. We did our best to accommodate everyone, but were left with expensive plane tickets, unmet expectations, and no time to create our own family traditions.

That’s why when we have kids, we decided to do a few things differently. First, we put a pause on holiday travel. Second, we made Halloween our family’s biggest celebration and embraced it in all its spooky, scary glory.

We go big on decorations with a 12-foot skeleton, multiple inflatables, and countless pumpkins by our front door. We host our friends and their kids for a quick pizza dinner before trick or treating. And my husband grills hot dogs for the entire neighborhood. Yes, really!

Here’s why picking a less popular holiday as our family’s biggest celebration lessened the holiday stress and helped us create our own family traditions.

Halloween comes with lower expectations

Since our kids don’t usually get Halloween off school, the expectation for travel is practically non-existent. Dinner is a low key affair, (think, four or five delivery pizzas to share) since our kids are chomping at the bit to start trick-or-treating, anyway.

While I love to decorate for Halloween, many of our decorations are reused year after year. Plus, my kids love to decorate and make things spooky, too — so the onus of making the house festive doesn’t fall squarely on me.

The author and her husband dressed up as Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce.
The author, shown here with her husband dressed up as the famous couple Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, said that her family goes all out for Halloween.

The financial burden is lessened

Apart from buying costumes and candy, Halloween really doesn’t come with a big financial burden. For example, while our kids have various Halloween events, including trunk-or-treats, parties, and Halloween night, we stick to a one-costume only rule.

Our Halloween decor is a mix of Dollar Store finds, Target pieces, and of course, our giant skeleton. While the latter was a bit pricier, it’s our one splurge and brings us (and the neighborhood) so much joy.

It leaves room for new traditions

Christmas and Thanksgiving often come with their own set of built-in traditions. The elaborate meals, multiple gift exchanges, and putting up lights and other outdoor decor all come to mind. We’re a pretty busy family, so after we’ve done all the traditional activities, we don’t have a lot of bandwidth for new ones.

Celebrating Halloween in a big way gives us the time and space to create our own traditions. For example, my husband grills hot dogs for the entire neighborhood. Last year, he made 150 total dogs. This year, we’re expecting 200. Kids love it, since many are too excited to eat before they set out trick-or-treating. And parents approve, too, since it gives their kids to eat something other than sugar.

The author's husband makes hot dogs on Halloween to share with the neighborhood.
The author’s husband makes hot dogs on Halloween to share with the neighborhood.

Grilling hot dogs is a tradition that my husband brought from his childhood. When he was growing up, there was a dad in his neighborhood who did the same thing. He loved it so much he decided to do it in our neighborhood and has earned the moniker of “hot dog man.”

Halloween isn’t for everyone. Many parents (and kids) aren’t crazy about the spooky decor, the costumes, or all the sugary treats. But for our family, picking a less popular holiday as our family’s unofficial favorite has lessened the holiday pressure and allowed for our own sweet and spooky traditions.

Read the original article on Business Insider
Categories
Selected Articles

How twin disasters reshaped Habitat for Humanity under CEO Jonathan Reckford in the past 20 years

How twin disasters reshaped Habitat for Humanity under CEO Jonathan Reckford in the past 20 years [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
Categories
Selected Articles

Russia has tested a new nuclear-capable missile, Putin and top general say

Russia has tested a new nuclear-capable missile, Putin and top general say [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
Categories
Selected Articles

One of Barnard student Tessa Majors’ killers — who was given slap on the wrist — still in trouble thanks to Raise the Age law

The 13-year-old arrested in the infamous stabbing death of Barnard student Tessa Majors has continued his life of violence — thanks to the Raise the Age law — with an attempted murder and an assault on a jail guard added to his growing rap sheet.
Categories
Selected Articles

Jets vs. Bengals: Preview, prediction, what to watch for in Week 8

An inside look at Sunday’s Jets-Bengals NFL Week 8 matchup in Cincinnati:
Categories
Selected Articles

Trump’s move to pay troops amid shutdown sets dangerous precedent, experts warn

Experts see move as Trump’s latest attempt to shift power of the purse away from Congress and into executive branch

By ordering that US military personnel receive paychecks even though the government is shut down, Donald Trump is seeing to the needs of a politically untouchable constituency that has been caught up in the congressional logjam over federal spending.

But experts who spoke to the Guardian warn that he is doing so in a way that is almost certainly illegal and, if left unchecked, bodes ill for Congress’s constitutional authority to control government spending. Some fear it could set the stage for the president to unilaterally fund other contentious decisions in the future, such as the deployment of the military on US soil.

Continue reading…

Categories
Selected Articles

‘We have to book bigger rooms’: Green membership surge causes novel problems

Party rides high with new leader Zack Polanski winning media plaudits and supporter numbers doubling to 140,000

A surge in membership levels is causing the Green party some novel problems. “Our local association went from 400 to over 1,000,” one activist said. “We had meetings booked in rooms with a capacity of 50, and loads of people were being turned away. We’ve had to start booking bigger rooms.”

The Greens have long been a party on the rise. But it is fair to say that in the near-seven weeks since Zack Polanski took over the leadership in England and Wales, things have gone to another level.

Continue reading…

Categories
Selected Articles

Russia arrests Ukrainian biologist for backing curbs on Antarctic krill fishing

‘Trumped-up’ charges spark diplomatic row as scientists express fears for health of 70-year-old Leonid Pshenichnov

A diplomatic row has erupted over the “illegal” detention of one of Ukraine’s scientists, who has been accused by the Kremlin of undermining Russia’s industrial trawling for krill in Antarctica.

Leonid Pshenichnov, 70, a Ukrainian biologist who is an expert on Antarctica, has a decades-long record of scientific research and contributions to conservation, including support for marine protected areas in the region.

Continue reading…

Categories
Selected Articles

Two men arrested over $100M Louvre Museum jewel heist — as one suspect was busted at airport trying to flee country: report

Two men who allegedly stole $100 million worth of France’s crown jewels during a daring daytime heist at the Louvre Museum were arrested on Saturday night — as one suspect was captured trying to flee the country.
Categories
Selected Articles

London police say they have arrested convicted asylum-seeker who was mistakenly released from prison

London police say they have arrested convicted asylum-seeker who was mistakenly released from prison [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now