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November 21st, 2009
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Look! on the skin
The symbol of what lies within.
Now turn red to tempt Snow White
To make her hungry for a bite.
..

 

--the Wicked Queen, Walt Disney's Snow White, 1937

 

There's nothing like a fresh fall apple. Crisp, juicy, sweet or tart, whatever your preference. Think of pick-your-own orchards, fresh apple pie, baked apples, candy apples, caramel apples, apple bobbing at Hallowe'en, Mrs. Prindable's chocolate-covered apples at Thanksgiving and Christmas...

 

As one of the quintessential fall fruits, apples are also associated with Hallowe'en. In generations past, trick-or-treaters might receive an apple from a neighbor, or a homemade treat, rather than the packaged candies we distribute today. Children might bob for apples at a Hallowe'en party. Earlier in the month, those of us who were Jewish would have put candles in hollowed-out apples mounted on hand-held flags to celebrate Simchat Torah.

 

Yet the apple, that very symbol of health and intelligence, has often been maligned in life and literature. There's the typical Biblical translation that calls Adam and Eve's forbidden fruit an "apple" (it was more likely an apricot or a pomegranate). There are the golden apples tossed in Atalanta's path to win her from her vow of virginity and allegiance to Artemis. And of course, there's the story of Snow White and the red, poisoned apple.

 

The apples for which we bobbed as children often had coins buried in them. While the prospect of extra money was exciting, it was possible to injure a tooth on -- or accidentally swallow -- a coin. The fruit itself suffered from the "yuck" factors of dirty, germy coins and the brown bruising that surrounded their insertion sites, and was often discarded. Our teachers told us each year horror stories of children who died from choking on razor blades that some (epithet deleted) had inserted in Trick-or-Treat apples. Teachers' suggested remedies ranged from having parents inspect all treats before allowing their children to partake, to summarily discarding anything that did not come in a factory-sealed wrapper. Years later, the razors morphed into pins found in those same factory-sealed candies. Soon, any "treat" one acquired seemed as likely as not to be a "trick".

 

For many of us with diabetes, Hallowe'en does not require sharps or poisons to ply its pernicious trade upon us. For some, the unadorned apple alone causes glucose levels to shoot into the stratosphere; for others, the "fun size" Snickers bar keeps us there for hours. Put the two together, and one might really believe the caramel coating was designed to disguise the poor quality of the often-bruised fruit beneath, or that the unbelievably-bright-red candy apple is really and truly the work of Snow White's evil stepmother.

 

In our house, we've taken the practical step of replacing candy treats with coin. This allows us to support childen's Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF efforts as well as give them something towards a more appropriate treat than stale candy. Other families choose to give Hallowe'en-themed school supplies and novelties that can be inexpensively purchased from craft store chains like Michael's and A. C. Moore or online vendors like the Oriental Trading Company. Still others choose to replace trick-or-treating -- especially for young children and teens -- with in-home Hallowe'en parties.

 

Whatever your choice of treats, be alert and be safe, watch out for kids (and pranksters), and enjoy the season.



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This was a very interesting and informative blog! I had already heard of razor blades being placed in apples at Halloween, but I always wondered why it wouldn't be blatantly obvious from a puncture in the skin in the apple. I never knew until now that originally coins were placed in apples, thereby being a disguise if a razor blade were to be inserted in the place of a coin.
Wow. I learn something new every day. :-)
Dantony C.


The coins were a twist on bobbing for apples (the child who got the most money in the apple also won some other party prize). Unfortunately, the brown discoloration around the places the coins went in rendered the apple -- at least for me -- inedible.

Razor blades at the time were thin metal sheets with two sharp edges and perforations in the center that went into old-style "safety razors". You would twist the razor handle to open the safety covers and expose the shaft, alignment holes, and plate on which the blade rested (and if installed, the blade). The blades from those razors were very thin and did not have any protective plastic.

I never got fresh fruit for trick-or-treat, but I have often suspected the issue may have been less one of not seeing the razor blades (or for that matter, anything weird about the apple) than not having inspected the fruit before chomping into it...

Brenda Bell (T`Mana)
T2 D&E dx 07/16/2002
T3 to 2 T2s (metformin/other
oral)


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Julia
JuliaJulia lives behind the Tofu Curtain, in the Pioneer Valley, in Western Massachusetts. It's a nice place. She likes it there. Her eldest daughter, Olivia, has type 1 diabetes. She's also 13. It's a real toss-up as to which is more difficult -- the diabetes or the teen-age drama. (Read More)
George Simmons
George SimmonsGeorge Simmons is a father and husband living with type 1 diabetes. A self proclaimed "born again diabetic," George began blogging as a way to meet other people living with diabetes and learn more about managing his disease. (Read More)
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