Put the 'Trick' Back Into Trick-or-Treat

Guest blogger Jenna McCarthy: I have a skeleton to pick with whomever came up with the whole trick-or-treat concept.
Don't get me wrong: I'm all for pumpkin-carving and adorable costumes and ghoulish, glow-in-the-dark decor. But the dimwit who decided it was wise to send our kids door-to-door amassing their weight in sugar in a single evening ought to be hog-tied and forced to spend thirteen back-to-back hours in a room full of the wound-up goblins. (Whatchamacallit Dude, I'm talking to you.)
My daughters may only be three and five, but they're smart. They take a mental inventory as the loot drops into their bottomless bags, so it's not like I can even sneak a bite-size Snickers out of the deal when they're not looking. "Mom! I had forty-six Tootsie Rolls and now there are only forty-five. Let me smell your breath." Little witches.
Back in her day, my well-intended grandmother attempted to sway the tide by opting to give out shiny new pennies in lieu of candy. (The woman actually pawed through her pennies to be sure they were indeed both shiny and new.) Trust me when I tell you there is nothing sadder than the sight of a 77-year-old woman leaping about her lawn and trying to remove 92 miles of toilet paper from her trees.
I mentioned to my friend Anne that I'd been fretting about how I was going to pry the sticky haul out of my daughters' grubby Halloween-stained hands. "You don't know about the Switch Witch?" she asked, aghast. I admitted I did not. "Oh, she rocks," Anne insisted. "Your kids get to pick out a toy that they want, and the day after Halloween, they leave their candy sacks by their beds and the Switch Witch takes it away and trades it for the toy."
I feel bad for the poor Switch Witch's thighs, but I'll take a ginormous bag of candy over a blood-stained incisor any day of the year.
How about instead of the switch witch we just teach our children moderation? They can collect the candy from trick or treating but it is the parents job still to tell them if they can or cannot have it. It’s sad that parents can’t be parents these days and have to rely on the switch witch to just make the problem go away for them.
I am with RachelAZ. I give her a few pieces that night and then I put my child’s candy in the pantry and give it to her one peice a day or so. She thinks it is a big deal to pick the one she wants. Eventually she tires of it or forgets about it (out of sight out of mind) and I pass the remaining candy along to my mother in law to give to her students (she is a teacher and her kids earn points for conduct they can trade in on Fridays for a peice of candy)







I LOVE the idea behind the Switch Witch. I’d be a nice switch witch and leave them with a small amount of candy, that’s part of the fun of Halloween. Does the witch use the candy in the kids’ lunches, or does it all go to her thighs? lol I adore the idea. A toy each child is a small price to pay!