There is only one thing Halloween means to me and that is memories of being scared witless by these when I was a small child...
In fact, when I found this image on the internet, after typing '1970s animal mask' into a search engine, my heart skipped a beat when it popped up. These masks - I remember there was a chimpanzee and a giraffe, too - were issued to us school children at this time of year as part of the 'fun and jollities' of Hallowe'en and Bonfire Night combined. Or Guy Fawkes Night as I more rightly remember it, which was a way bigger thing back in the 70s than Hallowe'en. Guy Fawkes Night I enjoyed. It meant building a huge bonfire on the field of my grandparents' farm, having a few fireworks, and eating baked potatoes and tomato soup in the dark. THAT was fine. It was the masks I hated.
I still don't like masks. To me, there is something sinister and deceitful in the wish to voluntarily hide one's face from view. I guess, probably wrongly, that I associate masks with the idea of criminal activity, practical joking and inciting fear. I should get over it, really, because I know people wear masks for other reasons that are perfectly legitimate, for example surgeons whilst operating, or sports people to protect their faces. But masks, like the lion one, merely bring memories of being a scared child in a playground wondering why all the other children found so much fun in wearing them.
And feeling like the odd one out.
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KJ
KJ