PETER BUFFA -- Comments & Curiosities
I’m not sure what time it was, but it was late -- well after midnight.
It was a windy night, restless, unusually cold for Halloween. The
occasional branch would scratch against a window, rapping, tapping,
gentle but persistent.
That’s exactly what I thought it was when I first heard it. The wind
and a branch, I thought, nothing more. But this time, there was no
mistaking the sound. Someone, or something, was rattling the knob on the
front door.
I made my way downstairs, reached for the light switch, then thought
better of it. I pressed my eye to the peephole. The outdoor light cast an
eerie, amber glow on the walkway. Not a soul in sight. It was just the
wind, and nothing more.
I moved to the living room window and stood motionless in the dark,
staring at the deserted street. I’m not sure what I expected to see as I
gazed into the darkness. But I liked the sound of the wind and the
clutches of leaves tumbling down the street. Beyond the street light, I
could just make out the roof line of the Estancia Adobe.
That’s when I thought I saw someone in the distance, at the top of the
steep incline that is our street. But it was nothing. The shadow of a
swaying branch perhaps, nothing more. Then I heard it again, louder this
time -- the doorknob, turning slowly, one way, then the other. I walked
to the door as softly as I could and forced myself to put one eye against
the peephole. I could hear my heart pounding and the blood rushing in my
ears.
This time, the walkway wasn’t empty. And nothing could have prepared
me for what was peering back from the other side. I pleaded with my legs
to move, but it was useless. I was frozen in place. I heard a soft click
as the doorknob gave way . . .
OK, so what do you think?
Spooky enough? I wanted to do a hair-raising tale for Halloween, but
then I thought, why blow it all on one year? I figure we can do this like
a soap opera.
Next year, whatever’s at the door can force its way inside while I
hide beneath the stairs. The year after that, it can close the door
behind it and actually start up the stairs. If we play this right, I’ll
have about four years before I have to decide what this thing is.
Wait -- why not make it interactive? You can send me alternate
endings. One year, it’s a zombie thing -- “the living dead” staggering up
Placentia Avenue from the far reaches of Fairview Park. The next year, it
turns out to be a really tall sixth-grader in a mask who’s lost and
scared to go home because it’s so late, turning the whole thing into a
sappy, feel-good story.
And that’s exactly why Halloween is one of my favorite holidays. It’s
a goofy, meaningless celebration for celebration’s sake. It goes in the
folder with Ground Hog Day (another favorite) and Founder’s Day --
special days we set aside to recognize things no one remembers, for
reasons no one understands.
Quick: Will there be six more weeks of winter if the groundhog does
see his shadow, or doesn’t? Who knows? More importantly, who cares? I
just love the same, silly story every year, with the chubby groundhog and
the guys in the top hats.
Founders Day? Meaning? Anyone? Didn’t think so.
Real holidays have a high potential for guilt. On Thanksgiving Day,
you worry about being grateful enough or on Christmas Day, too
materialistic. But on Halloween, what’s to worry? If you’re a kid, having
the most fun and consuming mass quantities of candy is your biggest
worry. If you’re a non-kid, you’re either oblivious to Halloween, or your
biggest worry is finding the right costume. The rest of the year should
be this stressful.
Is it commercial? Of course it is. What major holiday isn’t? When I
was a kid, Halloween meant a few rows of remarkably cheesy costumes in
the Five & Dime, and cardboard renderings of skeletons, pumpkins, witches
and black cats. You’d be hard-pressed to spend more than $5 on a costume
and enough cardboard pumpkins and witches to decorate an airport.
Today, it’s mind-boggling. There are 10,000 masks, most as lifelike as
anything Hollywood can conjure, plus indoor and outdoor Halloween
decorations, from lighted pumpkins to flying bats to who knows what. And
it’s not just for kids anymore. There are Halloween parties and dinners
and costume contests at every turn, from neighborhood get-togethers to
elegant affairs. This is the Golden Age of the Orange Holiday, and I have
no idea why.
I do have the best memories of it, though. I never covered the seven
blocks between school and home faster than on Halloween afternoon. I’d
patch together some ridiculous outfit that no one with a brain would call
a costume, grab the biggest shopping bag I could find and hit the
streets. We would move down the street like a swarm of locusts, scrubbing
every house and apartment clean of anything with a high sugar content,
discarding apples and anything else suspected of being healthy in the
nearest trash can.
It was impressive. I remember moving fast, very fast, from door to
door -- an organized, relentless, candy detection and collection center.
Because I invested all of three minutes in my “costume,” people would
constantly ask me, “What are you supposed to be?”
“I’m supposed to be home in 30 minutes,” I’d snap back. “Where’s the
candy?”
But those were simpler, gentler times. So have fun, be careful, watch
the kids like a hawk, but make sure they have the maximum fun allowable
under the law. This strange autumn ritual doesn’t mean anything, but
they’ll remember it for a long, long time.
Boo.
I gotta go.
PETER BUFFA is a former Costa Mesa mayor. His column runs Fridays. He
can be reached via e-mail at [email protected].
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