All Hallow’s Eve

by Richard Reeve on October 31, 2008

in Sand Box

The Sand Box

In bringing our children up, I resist the Disney-fication of myth, especially as it relates to the holidays.  Halloween seems the most challenging.  How do we find right balance?  The real content of the feast, the specter of death, is something our culture purposefully avoids?  All Hallow’s Eve, the night before the double feasts of All Saint’s Day and All Soul’s Day, the night that goblins and ghouls are released from the cometary, when the un-dead take center stage, the night to face our fears of death.    

 

The hoarding of candy is an example of where the Disney-fication leads the content of every mythologem: consumerism.  So how do we prevent that?  How do we keep the spooks in?  The difference between a Grimm’s fairy tale and a Disney-fied offering is where the answer lies.  The working of the oral tale on the imagination in half light around a fire is an important encounter for both children and adults with the archetype of initiation.  One of the failings of mass media for our growth and development is that atrophy of our collective imagination in the face of the flood of imagery that assaults our senses.  Again, all for the purpose of consumerism.  Tonight we will share a tale from a book of fairy tales from North Wales.  And yes, the purpose is to feel the fear, to doubt the rational determinism of the limits of reality, to give the irrational a context and opportunity to surface. 

 

Then there is the costuming, the masks, the playing with identity.  We take the time to build our costumes and to share to develop a story of the character and role our children will play.  My son remembers each and every costume he has built and has made it a point to learn what he wore when he was an infant.  These characters map for him his growth.  Mask making and wearing is an ancient source of ritual.  We encourage our children explore and play with their costumed roles.  It needs to be more than asking for candy.  

What other values are inherent in the holiday?  Behind the sense of the ghouls is simply the seasonal death of autumn.  And with that is the celebration of the harvest.  We are fortunate to have a pumpkin patch so that the jack-o-lantern we carve we also started from seeds last April, and seeds from these jack-o-lanterns have been saved for next years crop.  The extra seeds are baked and the extra pumpkins become pies.  In this way the value of sustainability underlies our celebration.  

One afterthought: Carl Jung noted that the gods have become our diseases.  To that end how interesting to consider the undead quality of the diseases that ravage our society.  Consider my challenge to let the ghouls speak again in the light of health care reform.  Hmm…now that’s a twist.

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  • Your appreciation for traditions, fantasies & fear echo my own desire to see holidays -- especially this one -- restored to some semblance of their original intent. I'd like to see more good old-fashioned abandon :wink: as people explore what each holiday does & could mean to them. Thanx for this unique view! :eek:

    As our Hallowe'en posts share some themes, you just may enjoy mine as well.. http://coffeesister.net/allhal... :roll:

    (|_|*cheers*|_|)
    "Proof of our society's decline is that Halloween has become a broad daylight event for many." ~ Robert Kirby
  • Kate
    For the last two days in NYC there were lines around corners at the costume shops. The equivalent of 50-100 people waiting to shop for a costume the day before and of Halloween. I don't get that. Pre-Halloween costume discovery was such important identity play in our family.
  • jeb
    As always Richard you offer a great example for the rest of us. Holidays seem to challenge tradition more and more these days, making the word mean little more than any other. I don't know where the blame lies, whether on sly marketers or our own tendency to simplify things (much easier to go buy a costume than make one yourself, for example) as life marches on.

    I'm hopeful the day will come when enough of us make these individual efforts (and then share them with as many people we can) necessary to turn the tide of modern consumerism.

    If not, I'll simply use my Godly powers (I am Zeus this Halloween, donning 1 of the 4 costumes my wife made this year - the others? Athena, Hermes and Poseidon) and force my will upon the land.

    Cheers...Jeb
  • Kate
    Wha? I thought is was the tramp and vamp holiday, when chicks dress up in tights and thinly veil cleavage over which guys in bloody fangs slobber liquored breath!? Add to that scary movie drive-ins
    and Mustangs and your off to some pretty scary races!

    My salient Halloween memories are centered dumping our bags out on the living room carpet. Inspecting apples for razor blades, (marketing myth now tells us that the razors-in-apples story was invented to stimulate candy sales, bingo!). Oh, the candy! Sugar Daddy's were parsed to my parents, to be melted down as ice cream topping, lest they pull out my molar fillings. That my have been my dad's piracy ploy to get his share of our loot. Then the counting of pieces and the sibling candy trading ensued--Milky Ways for Snickers (my favorites). It was like buying Monopoly properties. Some of my earliest currency-like exchanges! Oh, and you want to get away from the consumerism. Good luck!

    Kidding aside. I love that you are carving pumpkins that you grew!
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