Halloween Candy Haul: A Grandpa’s Last Trick-or-Treat Adventure


I wrote this in 2019, but thought it appropriate to bring it out again for Halloween.

I’m sad to say, that my wife did not believe me when I announced this would be my last “trick-or-treat” before my coming demise. There are three things left on my bucket list, and this will reduce it by one.

Walking out of the front door in my black jacket, black shirt, black jeans and Texas Rangers baseball cap, the look on her face says that she didn’t believe I would really do it. I reminded her to “hide and watch” as I departed down the sidewalk carrying my Trader Joes paper bag.

A few blocks down, I joined a group of children in search of sweets. It was cold, so most had on heavy jackets that hid their fancy costumes. The kids assumed I was someone’s grandfather and welcomed my presence as a chaperone and comrade. A few of the mothers gave me the stink eye, but being a kindly older fellow went a long way in easing their fears.

A few dozen houses behind us, the group was thinning down to a dedicated few. The hour was late and the school bell rings early, so the younger ones retreated for home to sort their spoils. I noticed that my bag was getting heavy, so I told the group I would do one last stop, then split for home.

Our last stop was a retirement apartment complex. One kid said ” it’s the best because old people miss their grandchildren and really pile on the goodies.” I can identify with that, and I would do the same if I was wielding the candy bowl.

As predicted, the octogenarians loaded our bags to the bursting point. They didn’t mess around with the bite size candy bars, everyone received full size bars, like the ones you see in grocery stores. My bag, one handle ripped, was maxed out.

Unable to carry my booty, I summoned my wife to drive me home. She was excited over the amount of candy I collected because she loves chocolate as much as any six-year-old, and I had enough to last for months.

At home, we turned on “The Bride of Frankenstein” and dumped my bag of goodies onto the den rug. We were, for a moment, children again. A treasure trove of candy lay piled before us. It was the largest haul of my life. I gave my spouse a smug “told you so” smile, as she clapped with glee and sorted out the best chocolate bars for her consumption. It was then things took a weird turn.

From the pile of sweet treasure I pulled a plastic bag of No. 2 Male Catheters. I’m thinking someone at that retirement home must be missing these by now. Digging further, I exhumed a new tube of hemorrhoid cream, two tubes of denture paste, a bottle of stool softener, handwipes, a pair of reading glasses, an adult diaper rolled up and tied with a blue ribbon and three 50% off coupons from Luby’s Cafeteria. I was mortified. My wife laughed so hard she barely made it to the bathroom. Well, at least I gave it a shot.


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8 Replies to “Halloween Candy Haul: A Grandpa’s Last Trick-or-Treat Adventure”

    1. Thanks, Nancy, a good laugh is always priceless. We had an un-eventful night: watched Bride of Frankenstein, which was a great campy movie. I now realize where Mel Brooks got all of his idea’s for his movie. It was almost like the Rocky Horror Picture Show.

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      1. We had no trick or treaters which was not surprising. We watched the same movie as well as Young Frankenstein. You’re right about Mel Brooks …. case in point, ‘walk this way’. We ate the kid’s candy and the night was most enjoyable.

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  1. I haven’t been out chaperoning trick-or-treaters since Halloween 2015, exactly ten years ago. I’ve lived in my house for 25 years now, and have never had a single (or married) trick-or-treater come knocking at my door. I spent the evening doing more indexing in my second detective novel. So much fun…(not).

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    1. Our neighborhood is a bit rural and dark. We haven’t had one kid in six years. When we lived in a golfing community full of young families, we had to stock up on candy and sometimes got down to money or IOU’s. I know there is a dark side to the night for many pagan’s, but for most of America, it’s a night of fun for the children. It started as a Christian tradition in Europe, but morphed into what we have today. Working on your novel was a better option. Keep in touch.

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