The best Halloween treat isn't even Chocolate or Candy


On Halloween, something appears to be more popular with children than Chocolate and Candy
It's difficult to articulate how essential candy is in my life; I can only point you to various other areas where I've discussed my feelings on candy. Of course, Halloween is peak season for someone like me, and like many of you, I keep my eyes riveted to what the main candy brands are up to around trick-or-treat time. So it gives me no joy to inform you that the most popular item I've ever distributed on Halloween night wasn't candy. In reality, it wasn't even food.

The finest non-candy gift to hand out to trick-or-treaters

Have you figured it out yet? It was stickers, dear reader. That's it; nothing except stickers. They aren't in the normal plastic wrappers you see on shop hooks. Instead, they're packaged like a little container of Dots or Milk Duds, with a few smaller sheets of skeletons, goblins, and ghouls within the beautiful cardboard. Halloween decorations. They are available in 18-packs from Amazon, Oriental Trading Company, Target, and other retailers.

When I had an extra lot of sticker boxes after a trip to meet my friend's kids in early October was canceled, I gave them out for the first time on Halloween. I'd carefully picked the candy to maximize joy (and limit horror), but the kids were quickly sifting through the bowl, enthusiastically selecting out the stickers and leaving the Reese's and Sour Patch to languish. The parents were as delighted as the children. "I love stickers!" " they'd shout, giving me the thumbs up. I suppose there will be less sweets to ration later on.

Now, I intend to provide stickers every year. I'll keep the candy in the bowl—I'll never pass up an opportunity to get a new generation hooked on Almond Joy—but the balance has shifted. Fewer fun-size bars, more stickers It's ideal for children with food allergies, children with unique nutritional needs, and children who may be reluctant to accept that sweets do not excite them. It's a way to be inclusive while being interesting. Stickers are fantastic, especially in the age of the all-consuming iPad screen, tactile arts and crafts mean much more to children.
Of course, these sticker boxes come in non-Halloween themes as well, and you could think, "Well, if I go non-seasonal, the stickers will be relevant all year round." That is adult logic, and I strongly advise you to abandon it immediately. Aside from the fact that children are obsessed with mummies, witches, and haunted homes on October 31 (who can blame them? ), any parent who has ever checked their child's YouTube watching history will tell you that youngsters are obsessed with Halloween 365 days a year. In the middle of a sweltering July afternoon, my niece forced me to watch Mickey Mouse's Halloween Spooktacular four times in a row. That's how it should be.

There's a good case to be made for varying children's candy hauls each year. Not to make items "healthier" for kids (see at you, toothbrushes, raisins, and pennies), but to keep their holiday—the one day that is totally and entirely for them—as surprise and exciting as possible.

And your pets are unlikely to eat stickers while you are not looking. Probably.

#Halloween #TrickOrTreat #Candy #Chocolate #Stickers

SOURCE: thetakeout

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