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HAPPY HALLOWEEN!
Posted On 10/31/2008 09:35:25


It's been a long time since I made my rounds on here, but I couldn't miss sending everyone a Halloween greeting!




AND.......A Birthday beating for Mel!

EVERYONE HAVE AN EGG FREE NIGHT!
Best Witches Trinity



The Pumpkins are coming!
Posted On 09/29/2008 07:49:48
   Well it's a few months since I last crawled over here, BUT Tis' the season.  I got a really late start this year decorating and didn't make any new props, I found a farm with Cheap pumpkins and hit a few yard sales over the summer and found a few of the old plastic blow mold decorations. I still love those cheesy things - brings back the childhood memories you don't have to tell a shrink about (at least I didn't, lol). This is our third year in the new house and my second year with no pumpkin patch yield , I had my hubbie trim trees to get more light, started them inside earlier so they were bigger, paid more attention to pollenating them and NOTHING! No pumpkin loving at my house - lol. We also had almost no honey bees to help out.  We're teaming up with a neighbor this year to have a larger Halloween Party and the haunted hayride is going to have ghostriders again, there's 5 ghost cowboys on horses & one zombie that run up on the wagon, the zombie jumps onboard. It was a great scare last year! They started working on it mid August, I haven't had  as much time as I would like to work with them.
 Anyway, I'm babbling - I'm excited it's Pumpkin Season!


Season's Beatings!
Posted On 12/24/2007 08:38:56

OK guys, let the beatings begin! I apologize to each and everyone of my friends for being M.I.A. for the last few weeks, I've been caught up traveling and shit for work and have put everything in the back seat.

 I haven't spoke to anyone in forever and with this being christmas eve I wanted to let all of you know that I think of you guys each day and wish that I had more time to get in touch with all of you.

With that being said - Happy Holiday to All, and you'll be hearing from me next year!

Love, hugs and spiked egg nog,

Trinity


It's Seasonal
Posted On 11/30/2007 09:59:30

 It's the holiday season, time to pick your emotion - merry, joyous, depressed, suicidial, indifferent, take your pick. This year I haven't seen the usual "Holiday Cheer and Goodwill" that normally picks most peoples spirits up, for me I spent my energies on Halloween so Xmas can come and go and I'll still have Halloween to look forward to. Why? It's still a solid holiday, sure it commericial like everything else - I don't have to worry if there's enough money to buy that distant cousin a gift [ not that I do,lol]. I know everyone will stop by for our party and every year it gets bigger and I've noticed my family and friends have more fun on that day than we've had at any of our Xmas dinners/parties. So this year let's cancel Christmas and save all that money so we can afford to put gas in our cars come this summer!


All Souls' Day
Posted On 11/01/2007 17:08:56

HALLOWE'EN
& ALL SOULS' DAY CUSTOMS
Taken from the November 1930 issue of The Catholic World 

The ancient Celts were much preoccupied with the thought of death and the mysterious life beyond so that nowadays, in countries populated by a Celtic stock, as Ireland, Brittany, Wales, Gaelic Scotland, or in certain English counties permeated in the past by Celtic influences, we find extant survivals of old traditions and customs associated with the season of the Holy Souls. Some of these observances will appeal to Catholics, others are distinctly superstitious; on the whole, however, whatever may have been the actual origin of many of these practices, they have been impregnated and transmuted, with Christian thought and feeling.

 

Brittany is the last great stronghold of old ways and manners. In that country, the people have —if one may thus express it —an intimate association with the departed souls, the "anaon," or "souls of the ancestors" as they are generally called.

 

The suffering souls are thought of as sometimes fulfilling their purgatory close at hand, in farmsteads, fields, or unfrequented lanes. If in conversation, the name of an ancestor, even a neighbor’s ancestor, is mentioned, some one will have the pious wish ready —"Peace to their souls."

 

Naturally, the continual remembrance or the departed has influenced Breton character and life considerably, while as might he expected from devout Catholic peasantry, this devotion to the "anaon’s" welfare reaches its climax on the "Night of the dead," our Hallowe’en. Then for forty-eight hours —so the Breton believes —the poor souls are liberated from Purgatory and are free to revisit their old homes, so that, of course, everything possible must be done to make them welcome.

 

It is a day of prayer, without a trace of the merriment of a Scotch or Irish Hallowe’en. All through the day, members of each household have prayed by the family graves; then in the late afternoon, everybody goes to "black Vespers" in the parish church; men and women kneeling round the catafalque (i.e., the false full-sized casket draped in black —Ed.) which throughout the year stands in a conspicuous position in the church.

 

In country parishes, as soon as Vespers is said, the congregation proceeds to the charnel-house —an important building in many churchyards —where bones from an over-full graveyard are kept. This night the doors are opened, some peasants kneel inside among the bones, others on the grass outside. In the dark, lit up only by the candles burning on each grave, they sing the Complaint of the Charnel-house, a Breton hymn, which first calls on Christians to gather together, then follows an appeal, as though issued by the bones themselves, beseeching for prayers and again for more prayers.

 

The ceremonies of the "veille" are by no means ended when the worshipers leave the churchyard. In the some districts, after supper is cleared away, each housewife spreads a clean cloth on the table, puts on it hot pancakes, curds, and cider. The fire is well banked up, chairs are put round it, and the family, after another De Profundis (Psalm 129), goes to bed.

 

Soon after nine o’clock, a messenger goes through the streets, ringing a bell to remind everyone to go indoors, as it is unwise to meet the souls streaming home at midnight. Later still, a band of singers —the "chanters of the dead" —go through the village, rap at each door to wake the sleepers; where upon they chant another Breton hymn asking for prayers, the Complaint of the Souls.

 

Then all is quiet, unless someone waking in the night, hears murmurs in the kitchen, or catches sounds of work. Then he knows the ancestors are back, warming themselves at the fire, for the poor souls are always cold; or trying their tools at their old labor.

 

Next day is "Toussoini" when the whole household goes to early Mass; the "Anaon," go too, for it is said on this day families are reunited —living and dead assist at Mass together.

 

Some districts had their special customs. In the Isle of Sein, four young men stayed in church during the night, tolling the bells hourly. (The number "four" is the classic number of man. It symbolizes the four temperaments of man; choleric, sanguine, melancholic, and phlegmatic. It also stands for the four seasons and the four cardinal virtues; prudence, justice, temperance and fortitude. —Ed.) Four other men went to every house on the island where someone had died during the previous year, and called on the inmates to say the De Profundis with them.

 

Another most touching custom prevails. It is not usual for women to go out in the fishing boats, but when a sailor or fisherman has been drowned, and his body has never been recovered, on All Souls’ Day the women from the bereaved family sail far out with the men, and all say the De Profundis for their dead relative.

 

Irish folk, as is well known, keep Hallowe’en with great zest. In the West, after the young people’s games with nuts and apples are finished, the housemother builds up the fire with sods, sets the chairs round in a semicircle, spreads the table with a clean cloth, and puts ready for the Holy Souls a large uncut loaf and a jug of water. In parts of Kerry, a pot of tea is put out on Christmas Eve for the poor souls, and it is noteworthy that the pious legends of Breton say that the ancestors are liberated from Purgatory on Christmas Eve and St. John’'s Eve, as well as Hallowe’en.

 

That infamous killer of Catholics, Queen Elizabeth of England, forbade all observances connected with All Souls’ Day. In spite of her ordinance, "souling" customs —mentioned historically both before and after the Reformation —went on in English and Welsh counties for centuries, and indeed, have not quite disappeared yet from a few Shropshire villages.

 

The practice itself was very homey. On All Souls’ Day, women and girls visiting well-to-do neighbors’ houses, begged for and received "soul cakes" (shortbreads). The older forms of request are interesting as they show pre-Reformation Catholic phraseology, for in return for the cakes, prayers were apparently offered for the donor’s soul: "A soul-cake; a soul-cake, have mercy on all Christian souls, for a soul-cake." (Note how the "treating" part of today’s Hallowe’en was originally sanctified as an opportunity to pray for one’s neighbor! —Ed.)

 

As time went on, prayers for the poor souls were forgotten, and the making of special soul-cakes ceased also. Apples, buns, and money were dispensed to children. The only "soulers" left came round singing country rhymes instead of the old time request for "a soul-cake, good mistress, I pray thee, a soul-cake." The following verse is typical of the rhymes:

 

Soul, soul, an apple or two,
If you haven’t an apple, a pear will do,
One for Peter, two for Paul.
Three for the Man Who made us all.

 

It is rather surprising to find that in East Yorkshire, where the people are of mixed Saxon, Danish, and Norse descent, a similar custom prevailed. There it was the bakers who gave their customers, on November 2nd, "saumas (soul-mass) loaves" small square buns with currants (i.e., small seedless raisins —Ed.) spread in the shape of a cross on top. One bun was supposed to be kept in the house during the following year for "good fortune."

 

Though not connected with Hallowe’en or All Souls’ Day, the remarkable funeral custom of "sin eating" is worth mentioning. In the 18th century and later, when someone died in Wales and Hereford, the "sin eater" of the parish, generally a very poor and humble man, was brought to the house. Standing on one side of the corpse, a crust of bread, a mug of ale (in some districts, milk) and a sixpenny were handed him over the dead body. The "sin eater" ate and drank, thereby signifying that he had taken on himself, i.e., "eaten the sins" of the deceased and thus prevented the soul from haunting the old home. (While this practice may seem strange to us, it evokes the Catholic dogma of Our Lord’s propitiation for all our sins. "Him, Who knew no sin, He hath made sin for us that we might be made the justice of God in Him [Christ]" —II Corinthians 5:21. The same dogma is recalled at Holy Mass when the priest spreads his hands over the bread and wine, soon to become Our Lord; an image of the rite in the Old Testament when the priest spread his hands over a goat, bringing down upon the animal the sins of the people, then letting it escape alone into the wilderness. This "sin-laden" goat was call the "scape-goat"Ed.) Nominally in 18th century custom, "sin eating" or traces of it seemed to have lingered in Wales until the middle of the 19th century, while in Herefordshire, thc ceremonial drinking of port wine by pall bearers and visitors in the room in which lay the corpse, looks much as though it were a reminiscence of the same custom. (Until disallowed by community hygienic laws, wakes were held in the homes of the deceased, especially among the Irish. —Ed.)

 

When a funeral takes place in some districts of London, the mourners make efforts to have among the floral displays, at least one "gate," which, as its name suggests, consists of flower or greenery-covered "bars," with a white bird also represented in flowers. Now it seems as if this cherished floral "gate" might well be a folk memory, taking tangible form, of a once widespread belief that when a man died, his soul escaped through his lips in the form of some little creature, in Brittany a gnat or a mouse, in England and Ireland, a white butterfly or bird. There is another vestige of the superstition in Derby and Yorkshire, where white night-flying moths are called "souls" by country people.

 

Past beliefs never quite disappear; some part should be made to live on, though perhaps changed here and there, so that among our children and in our Catholic parishes at least, among I the everyday materialistic business and hubbub, we Catholics I give physical expression to the truth that departed souls wind their way through the gates of death to the life beyond —Heaven, Hell, Purgatory.

 

In pre-Christian times, food was put out for the dead. Catholics have sanctified this pagan custom and now bake special breads in honor of the holy souls and bestow them on children and the poor. "All Souls’ Bread" (Seelenbrot) is made and distributed in Germany, Belgium, France, Austria, Spain, Italy, Hungary, and in the Slavic countries.

 

In Poland the farmers hold a solemn meal on the evening of All Souls’ Day, with empty seats and plates ready for the "souls" of departed relatives. Onto the plates members of the family put parts of the dinner. These portions are not touched by anyone, but afterward are given to beggars or poor neighbors. In the Alpine provinces of Austria destitute children and beggars go from house to house, reciting a prayer or singing a hymn for the holy souls, receiving small loaves of the "soul bread" in reward. There, too, people put aside a part of everything that is cooked on All Souls’ Day and give meals to the poor.

 

In Hungary the "Day of the Dead" (Halottak Napja) is kept with the traditional customs common to all people in central Europe. In addition, they invite orphan children into the family for All Saints’ and All Souls’ days, serving them generous meals and giving them gifts.

 

In the rural sections of Poland the charming story is told that at midnight on All Souls’ Day a great light may be seen in the parish church; the holy souls of all departed parishioners who are still in purgatory gather there to pray for their release before the very altar where they used to receive the Blessed Sacrament when still alive. Afterward the souls are said to visit the scenes of their earthly life and labors, especially their homes. To welcome them by an external sign the people leave doors and windows open on All Souls’ Day.

 

In Austria the holy souls are said to wander through the forests on All Souls’ Day, sighing and praying for their release, but unable to reach the living by external means that would indicate their presence. For this reason, the children are told to pray aloud while going through the open spaces to church and cemetery, so the poor souls will have the great consolation of seeing that their invisible presence is known and their pitiful cries for help are understood and answered. [Adapted from Handbook of Christian Feasts and Customs by Fr. Francis Weiser.]

 PRAYER FOR THE HOLY SOULS

O God, Creator and Redeemer of all the faithful, grant to the souls of Thy servants departed the remission of all their sins, that through our devout prayers they may obtain the pardon which they have always desired (Collect from the first Mass of All Souls’ Day).


2 more days
Posted On 10/29/2007 11:19:38

 Well there's 2 days left - there's still pumpkins to slaughter and props to repair, (thanks to the high winds and non-stop rain for the last week and a half) that's par for the coarse. Our party went much better than I expected, even with the extra people who tagged along with the guests. The smaller children had to be convinced into entering my house of horrors, that in itself makes all my hard work worth it.

 Once everyone was here I dragged them all to the other end of the community to the "Haunted Hayride" our community teen center puts on - it was great last year and I was hoping this year would be just as good due to all the bragging I'd done.

We waited roughly 15 minutes on line loaded onto the hay wagon and off we went. A few minutes down the road we started to hear firecrackers and "clopping" noises to everyones shock the hay wagon was surrounded by "Zombie Cowboys" on horse back!  The wagon paused just within sight of the barn the zombies messed with the "screamers" and begged for zombie chow. They added more outside actors playing on a " Wrong Turn" & " Texas Chain saw" Theme, some teenagers where caged in the stray pen cannibalizing a corpse. A group of girls were dressed as the 3 sirens and their minions. Inside they added 3 new scenes, the hanging man, the deli, and the ringu T.V. scene. Sorry no photos - I'm trying to convince the director to allow me to post some photos - I'm not holding my breath though, I asked last year too.

So, of the 26 guests I dragged down there 9 chickened out and the rest of us had a blast! Back at my house the "stay behinds" had the whole nieghborhood light up with my lights and loud halloween music [ the one I said with the creepy noises], thank god all my neighbors were at my house or they would of complained!  I was delighted that everyone was talking about coming to next years party before the end of the night, I'll need some ideas from you guys for next year,lol.

Hope everyone has a Happy & Safe HALLOWEEN!

Best Witches!

Trinity


AMC Monster Fest IQ Test
Posted On 10/22/2007 16:52:38

 I've been waiting and today is the day, it's finally here MONSTER FEST on AMC! It seems every year it gets shorter and shorter, I remember when it went for the whole month of October.

Anyway - here's the IQ test:

http://static.amctv.com/swf/games/monsterfest/horroriq_popup.html

enjoy!


Halloween Blog Things
Posted On 10/22/2007 12:13:42
You Are an Alien

You're so strange, people occasionally wonder if you're from another world.
You don't try to be different, but you see most things from a very unique, very offbeat perspective.
Brilliant to the point of genius, you definitely have some advanced intelligence going on.
No matter what circles you travel in, you always feel like a stranger. And it's a feeling you've learned to like.

Your greatest power: Your superhuman brain

Your greatest weakness: Your lack of empathy - you just don't get humans

You play well with: Zombies

 

Your Halloween Costume Should Be CatwomanYour Unique Costume is a Wardrobe Malfunction Cause a scene!You Are Scary You even scare scary people sometimes! What Your Halloween Habits Say About You You love the drama of Halloween. You definitely like to have the best costume around - and everyone noticing you.

You definitely think of yourself as someone who has a dark side. And part of having that dark side means not showing it.

Your inner child is open minded, playful, and adventurous.

You truly fear the dark side of humanity. You are a true misanthrope.

You're prone to be quite emotional and over dramatic. Deep down, you enjoy being scared out of your mind... even if you don't admit it.

You are a total overachiever and workaholic. You're the type of person who plans their elaborate Halloween costume weeks in advance.
You Could Definitely Be a Vampire Immortality, staying pretty forever, not having to get a job... you could definitely eat some flesh for these things.
It's not that you're a murderer by nature. In fact, you're probably the furthest thing from it.
However, if you woke up a vampire, you'd certainly be able to adapt and enjoy your new lifestyle.
There might not be much better than living forever, even if it means giving up your soul.

What you would like best about being a vampire: Being a total outsider

What you would like least about being a vampire: Other vampires

The horror of the crates
Posted On 09/23/2007 17:50:31

As I type this my back is throbbing with the reminder of having way to many crates of Halloween decorations. Most of the afternoon was spent like a Christmas morning opening crate after crate and unwrapping the carefully packed decorations. The kids are excited, as much as I am that I finally had the energy to go through them and start decorating the house.  Everyone knows, you never realize how much you have till you have less space for it, and boy do we have too much. There's enough lights to do our house twice and more scary animated props than yard. I figure by next Saturday we'll have everything up and in place, if not - what's another day or two [lol].

 If I get my way this year, the indoor Halloween decorations are staying up for another 364 days, I keep trying but sometime around December I start getting grief over them and someone drags a tree into the house. A few years ago I tried using the Halloween lights on the tree but it didn't go over very well. this year I'm going to do a hard sale on the "Nightmare Before Christmas" theme, I have 2 of the 3 kids backing me so it just may work. Or I'm just going to do it anyway and listen to a troll for a few months.

Well, everyone have a great week and let me know how your Halloween is coming together, I'll be keeping you guys posted.

Trinity




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