Archive for April, 2007
Dingbat Party Game
Posted by: | CommentsHeres a great way to warm up your party.
Prepare about 30 cards and draw up picture writing that respresents a well-known phrase or saying.
Hold up the card so all guests can see it,
When someone says the right answer move on to the next card.
You don’t even need to keep score here.
Its just a great way of getting your party started.
matching proverbs
Posted by: | CommentsThis party game requires card and a hat or basket.
Brainstorm a list of well known proverbs .
You will need 1 for each guest.
Now write half of the proverb on one card and half on another .
So “he who hesitates” is on one card and “is sloshed” on antoher
The first half proverb cards are put in to the hat and the 2nd half proverbs are placed around the house face down.
So guests have to select one half from the hat and then search the house for the other matching half.
The 1st person to match 2 halves is the winner.
[tag]party warm up games[/tag]
Halloween Outings
Posted by: | CommentsA night of fright can be had by you and your friends! A Halloween outing is just the ticket! Whether visiting a local haunted house or horror show at a theme park, or just going to see the ‘Rocky Horror Picture Show’ again, Halloween is fun!
Try adding the following activities and have even more fun:
1. Invite everyone before hand to your home to carve pumpkins. Go to a pumpkin stand to pick them out first together and then take loads of pictures.
2. If going to a costume party, pick them out together. Pick hair coloring too and candy to eat.
3. Dress up together while playing Halloween tunes in the background.
4. Stop at a graveyard. This is great!
5. Have a picnic at a graveyard while telling spooky stories.
6. Take back roads while driving to and from your destinations. They are spookier!
7. Make sure to go through each town you can to see the decorations.
8. Let everyone sleep over at your home.
9. Play games that revolve around Halloween.
10. Have foods both on Halloween night and the morning after that are traditional foods for Halloween.
Having Halloween fun can be more enhanced by the above.
Long Held Halloween Beliefs
Posted by: | CommentsAn annual celebration, Halloween has been called demon worship, as its roots are pagan. The word itself has its roots in the Catholic Church, and it’s a contraction of ‘All Hallows Eve’.
In the fifth Century, Celts in Ireland officially ended summer, with ‘Samhain’, the Celtic New Year. Fresh living bodies were said to be occupied by the dead at this time, as their hope for the afterlife. Celtic beliefs that laws of space and time were muted, and the spirit world came into the living world.
The living of course, did not want to be possessed, so the rituals of Halloween were initiated to prevent this. Fires were extinguished to make homes uninviting, and noisy parades drove off spirits. A Druidick fire was kept buring at Usinach, from which others then lit their fires again.
Burning at the stake of those thought to be possessed is one myth, as a lesson to the spirit world. Romans adopted Celtic practices, and ‘Samhain’ was incorporated into Roman traditions. Honoring Pomona, the Roman Goddess of fruit and trees is one of these, and bobbing for apples sprang from this.
Ritualized celebrations became common, and dressing up in costume became prevalent. Irish immigrants in the 1840s that fled the potato famine brought trickery with them, and the 9th Century custom of ‘souling.’ Begging for ‘soul cakes’ by beggars would result in prayers for the dead, as the dead were said to be in limbo until enough prayers were said.
Irish folklore is probably responsible for the Jack-o-Lantern, as a drunkard named Jack was suspended from both heaven and hell for tricking the devil. He traveled through time with a lantern in his hand made from a coal from hell. Jack captured the devil in a tree and refused to let him down bringing the wrath of both God and the devil on himself. Jack’s lantern was undoubtedly a turnip, but was replaced in tradition by the more attainable pumpkin.
Halloween is not an evil practice, but rather a cultural holiday that is enjoyable for merriment overall. Even churches today have Halloween parties, and events for children.
Deep History of Halloween 2
Posted by: | CommentsIn the United States, American settlers brought their own beliefs about witches and ghosts. Irish and Scottish immigrants in the 1800s as well as Germans brought lore and costumes of their own, and voodoo beliefs came with Haitian and African peoples. The United States had a variety of beliefs that were regional by the end of the 1800s.
New Hampshire had barn dances, and New York City had parades and firecrackers. North Carolinians believed that the wind carried whispers of the future, and in Louisiana, cooking a supper eaten without speaking was common.
Large community celebrations became common the in 1900s, and adults joined in the fun more. Trick or treating became really popular in the 1940s and 1950s, with Halloween becoming more commercial each year. Now, even wearing a costume on the job is common, and large cities have large nightclub and party celebrations. Amusement parks are rife with celebrations, and private and civic organizations use the holiday as a springboard to raise money for charitable causes.
Who is That Ghost ?
Posted by: | CommentsIn this game you ask all the men to leave the room and the women to sit down on chairs with a number on each.
They then cover themselves in a white sheet.
Ask the men to return and try to indentify who is who by asking the ghosts to groan.
The ghosts can only repsond with a groan, not by speaking
Men can also feel the ghosts hair and eyebdrows nose and ears. It’s best here to restrict this to head and shoulders only.
At 5 minutes you call a halt and the man with the most correct identifications is the winner.
The next part of the game consists of swapping roles with the men being the ghosts.
[tag]party games[/tag]