Autumn is a great time of year in New York. The humid misery
of summer is behind us and the holidays are ahead of us. The trees turn
brilliant shades of red, orange and yellow and the air is electric with new
possibilities. There is a sense of renewal that is similar to that of the
spring but with a more ominous edge. The light grows dimmer and there’s a
depressing feeling as the twilight of summer is again denied us. It is time to
reap the harvest, but time is running on our days and year.
Like the Christmas holiday, the commercial anticipation of
Halloween grows larger every year and we saw Halloween pop-up stores appear as
early as August in some places. And there are pumpkin spice flavored food and beverages being offered ad nauseam. At the 7
Eleven where I get my coffee, they have a shaker of pumpkin flavoring so you
can make your coffee like a pumpkin Big Gulp if they run out of pumpkin spice
coffee. I agree the pumpkins spice has become excessive, but let’s not turn our
back on traditional greats like pumpkin pie.
But the season of the pumpkin is a good time to embrace the
fall. And the increasingly long Halloween season brings with it some worthwhile
activities.
My good friend Jay, lead guitar player for New York punk
rock band Endangered Feces, invited me and my
family to join his family at the Rise of the Jack-O-Lanterns event,
which features a walk through a path lined with intricately carved pumpkins. It
features pumpkins carved with many different images and strung together in
forms as large as dinosaurs, zebras, skeletons. There was a Hillary Clinton
pumpkin and a Donald Trump pumpkin, and carvings that celebrated popular TV
shows like Orange Is The New Black
and Game of Thrones. The security
people told everyone no flash photography was allowed, so my photos didn’t come
out too well, but it was enjoyable to bring the kids.
It was a nice brisk evening and it wasn’t too long, and
brevity is much appreciated when you’re hauling little kids with you. The event
we went to was in Old Westbury, Long Island, New York not far outside our
city’s borders. Living in Eastern Queens makes it easier to own a car which
makes it easier to head to Long Island for events such as these, but you can
take public transportation to similar events elsewhere.
You don’t have to go see nicely carved jack-o-lanterns and
you don’t have to put any pumpkin crap in your coffee, but it’s important to do
something to commemorate the autumn. Watch the leaves change colors, visit a
haunted house, hand out non-poisoned candy to children on Halloween. Walk
through a corn maze and go hunting. Take your significant
other into a cemetery and conceive a child there. Wander the streets of New
York on a ridiculously long walk. Get out of the house before it’s too cold.
The season of the pumpkin is upon us. Do not let it go
quietly.
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