Halloween: Scary Fun or Just Plain Scary?

www.kidwisecorner.com

I am going to dispel some of myths and misinformation that may be fueling your fears and making your job harder especially around Halloween, when your kids want to have some good, scary fun.

Myths, Memories, and Realities       
                   
You are not alone if you believe that the world is more dangerous today than when you were a child.  But, the fact is many of the problems we have now we had thirty years ago.  The biggest difference is that today we get bombarded with bad news and it takes a cumulative toll on our peace of mind.  This constant barrage of upsetting news causes us to develop an increasingly vulnerable outlook about our ability to keep our kids safe. 

Also, you may be grieving over the fact that your children will not have the same carefree childhood you had.  As children, many of us felt securely anchored in our community and in our neighborhoods. We felt free to cut through backyards, take short cuts, and horror of horrors, and accept homemade unwrapped treats on Halloween! 

Today we raise our children with more restrictions, structure and supervision than we grew up with.  We enroll our children in supervised after school activities.  We impose strict curfews, forbid them from playing outside after dark and require them to check in regularly when they are off with friends.  Childhoods now — urban, suburban or rural — are neither the childhoods we had, nor the childhoods we would have invented for our children.

Protecting Kids Today

Protecting our children today means being more active in helping kids learn how to gauge what's safe.  But we don't protect children by hovering over them.  We protect them by using age appropriate expectations and by taking into account their strengths and their vulnerabilities.  We also protect them by setting limits, supervising them, and making sure they can successfully deal with potential problems before we say yes.

To keep your children safe on Halloween:
  • Protect them from situations beyond their abilities. For example, young children should not be expected to navigate the streets without an adult supervising them.  Older siblings are not a good substitute for a parent on Halloween.  Most prefer to be with their friends that night and should be allowed to do that if they can behave responsibly.
  • Prepare them for situations before they are expected to deal with them.  Discuss Halloween safety tips with all of your children, no matter what age they are.  Emphasize tips that are especially important in your neighborhood or that were a challenge last year.  Get your kids agreement that they will follow the safety rules.
  • Observe and talk about and situations you encounter. If you are supervising your children on Halloween night, think of it as a practice session and use the many teachable moments that come up.  For example, point out safe and unsafe behavior when you see it, whether it is kids crossing the street or navigating the sidewalks in costumes that limit their vision.  Explain that only on Halloween night can children accept candy from people they do not know.  The possibilities are endless and you can point out safety behavior without putting a damper on your kids fun.