Got a question or two for ya…

Day before yesterday, while I was driving through a poorer neighborhood, I saw a man with a little girl (judging by her height, she was maybe 5 or 6) by a house decorated up with Halloween images: skeletons, witches, other (I imagine) scary props that are meant to evoke feelings of fear in the observer.

As the little girl was standing front and center, absorbing/soaking it all in to her impressionable little brain, I thought to myself, “What must go through her mind, as she contemplates these images?”  I wondered what kind of future (or even immediate) effect it might have on her delicate psyche.  How is she built, DNA-wise?  Built in a way to pass it off as "no big deal," just some innocent fun?  Is it psychologically helping or harming her, long term-wise?  I also wonder that same thing about people who enjoy horror movies, crime shows, and other (I’ll call it) “negative entertainment” that many are attracted to.

Are displays of negativity just done to get people used to such ideas (acclimate them) so they don’t seem so scary?  The old "What doesn't hurt them makes them stronger" approach?  Is it meant to evoke some kind of “comedic terror,” giving the message that “It’s all okay; it’s not real, so we can laugh at it?”  IOW, is it done in the “spirt of fun?”

Q: So, regarding people who love to decorate up their house and yard with scary Halloween items, what do you think/what do you make of such people?  How do you, as a grown-up adult, interpret that?  How do you think little kids interpret that?

(by PrimalSoup)

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