Your Turn
Crazy Days and Nights is a gossip site. The site publishes rumors, conjecture, and fiction. In addition to accurately reported information, certain situations, characters and events portrayed in the Blog are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Information on this site may contain errors or inaccuracies; the Blog’s proprietor does not make warranty as to the correctness or reliability of the site's content. Links to content on and quotation of material from other sites are not the responsibility of Crazy Days and Nights.
Cookies & 3rd Party Advertisements Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on your site. Google's use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to your users based on their visit to your sites and other sites on the Internet. Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy. We allow third-party companies to serve ads and/or collect certain anonymous information when you visit our web site. These companies may use non-personally identifiable information (e.g., click stream information, browser type, time and date, subject of advertisements clicked or scrolled over) during your visits to this and other Web sites in order to provide advertisements about goods and services likely to be of greater interest to you. These companies typically use a cookie or third party web beacon to collect this information. To learn more about this behavioral advertising practice or to opt-out of this type of advertising, you can visit https://www.networkadvertising.org/managing/opt_out.asp.
17 comments:
The carpet salesman asked me if I would fancy a shag.
I’ve found my new favorite place to shop!
None, at least what I was aware of.
My bff's mom got all my Boston Baked Beans. (I bet they don't even come in Halloween candy mixes anymore!!) Any my parents got anything licorice or that looked old fashioned at that time (70's, early 80's) like Mary Janes Bit o'Honey, Charleston Chew... Memories...
My Dad took all my Mounds and Almond Joys, which was fine with me.
The only candy I refused to share was Reese's Peanut Butter Cups.
Probably quite a bit of it but there was so much we never really noticed. Pixie Sticks, sweet tarts, Smarties were my favorites so I would grab all of those. My grandma liked the traditional taffy-like candy. I'm not sure how the rest shook out.
I got to keep all of mine, but my kids get to keep 20 pieces and I pay them $10 for the rest
I gave them most of it because I was always picky about the kinds of candy I would eat. In fact I would often trade most of what I brought home for what we were handing out, because they always bought what I & they liked best (in case of leftovers so they would not go to waste).
They only took the Reeses
Which was ok
They let us eat 10% off the top on Halloween night, I'd guess that they secretly ate about 5%, and the remaining 85% was doled out to us slowly in lunch snacks and as after-dinner treats.
My parents never took any of our candy. But we used to take half of our kids' haul and give them a movie or a book in exchange for it.
Melania..cuz lady is a joker with no jokes
And no my parents bought their own candy and didn't take from their child i bet Lady's parents took hers that's why she's failing at life
We'd go through it together to avoid razorblades, but they never confiscated anything. They weren't dickheads. Nor did they pretend to eat it all like that cunt Kimmel.
The only thing we did was give any black licorice to my father, they didn’t take our candy. Totally not interested.
Halloween in the deep South was different in the 40s and early 50s. Lots of home baked goodies went into the Woolworth jackerlanterns. Home made fudge was really big. Toll House cookies from the Klein house was a must. Evelyn Klein made the best Toll House cookies in the world! My mom made home made mints. Great times. No, they didn't eat our candy because there was none left to eat by the time we went to bed.
I'm too old to remember or care. These days, my concern is making sure I don't buy candy that I want to eat.
Everything but five pieces. I'd pick my favorites, and they would donate the rest.
Post a Comment