Filed under: Family
We almost never get trick or treaters. We always hope.
It’s the day of the hat, the Cat in the Hat hat that makes him about eight feet tall. After all these years of being scrunched into a box 364 days a year, it was just slightly wrinkle-ish in the middle but once it was on his head it stood proud and tall in its fine bright stripes, trying to make his intimidating height into a relatable and good thing from a small child’s vantage point.
Not once on the doorbell.
I just walked in the other room where he was and guffawed. His hat! (While he looked at me like –What?)
The top half had fallen in on itself and then flopped over. Like a tired kid on candy overload needing to be put to bed and put over its parent’s shoulder as they carry their little dragon home.
(Now if I can just get a photo of the finished afghan to come through here.)
1 Comment so far
Leave a comment
Here, the bunny ears do the same job! (But they got to do their job – it’s an absolute delight getting to hear the happy-kid noises through the windows as they get closer and then ding-dong the porch doorbell [you can also tell when the kid being allowed to ring the doorbell is under the age of 5 because it is pushed and pushed and pushed] and then hearing spouse and kids at door and the silliness and excitement of the kids. It’s got a lot of good things in it, Halloween does, despite the ehhh things also jammed in.)
Comment by KC 11.01.25 @ 9:26 amLeave a comment
Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>
AlisonH