Thursday, October 30, 2025

Haunted Houses by Jenn McKinlay




JENN McKINLAY: I remember my first haunted house. It was put on by the boy scouts in our small northwestern Connecticut town. There was a lot of giggling and slimy stuff and jump scares. It was the length of the stage in the school cafeteria/gym but it felt like a mile to my seven-year-old self. 

Full disclosure: I was the kid who could never let a hand or foot be uncovered by my protective blanket lest the monsters that roamed my room at night grab me.

Needless to say, after one jump scare to many, I grabbed my mom's hand and death gripped it all the way through the exit where I turned to her in relief only to discover she was not my mom. Not a monster but not my mom. I was teased mercilessly about that for years.

When the Hooligans went through their first haunted house, oldest was fearless. Nothing scared him. Not the spiders climbing the walls, the snakes on the ground, the zombies trying to grab him, or the vampire rising out of the coffin. Youngest desperately wanted to go through but he was terrified. Our solution? I covered his eyes with my hand and we went through together and while he jumped at the creepy noises, he managed to get through it. Now, they both go to those elaborate Scream Farms, but I'm good. I don't see well in the dark and the potential for me to wet my pants is high (sorry for the overshare), so, no thank you.





             Tiffany Haddish and Andy Lassner visit a Haunted House

How about you, Reds and Readers? Are you haunted house fans or no? What experiences have you had in haunted houses?


11 comments:

  1. No haunted houses for me, thank you very much. Didn't go to them when I was a kid; don't go to them now . . . .

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  2. Does Winchester mystery house count? I remember visiting it. I’ve seen haunted houses in movies though I have no memory of visiting haunted houses in real life.

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  3. The software company where I worked for many years held a Spooky Trail every year. Groups would elaborately decorate their cubicle areas or conference rooms, and employees brought their kids to follow the map and walk through it. Some of those geeks got very elaborate - and spooky! We tech writers did, too. (Sites were labeled little kid-friendly ... or not.) In general, I'm not one for haunted houses, although a good surprise can be fun, like when the stuffed zombie on a dark porch turns out to be a real person handing out candy.

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    1. My youngest and his wife spend a huge amount of time creating what might be called a grotto to hand out the kids candy. There are sights and sounds and costumes and scary music - I suspect it is quite a production and the highlight of their neighbourhood. They plan it for most the the year. It is never the same.

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  4. The only one I have been through is at Disney. I've been through it a bunch of times, as a teen, a young adult, with my kids, with my grandkids. It's tame compared to the one in the video clip, but fun. I wouldn't choose to do one at a fair or anywhere else.

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  5. I am a one and done when it comes to Haunted houses.It is the darkness and not being able to see what’s coming that bothers me. I went with friends in high school. First we watched what I think was the original Dracula movie in the school auditorium which I didn’t care for either. I think it was probably all out on as a fundraiser for student council or some such group.
    I really don’t like going in caves either.

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  6. When I was younger I loved going to haunted houses because I scared them by my actions - I could sense when the next person or item was going to show up. As an adult, I'm not a fan because technology makes it more advance and my heart can't take it.

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  7. When I was a teenager I went to my one and only haunted house. It was some sort of youth group event, with a party at one part of the property and the haunted house next-door to it. The haunted house was set up in a barn. We either walked or crawled through a maze, depending on what part of the maze we were at. The walls were created by bales of hay. Creatures jumped out at us from behind the “walls.” I started sneezing nonstop, and then wheezing. I hadn’t had an asthma attack in about seven years, and I was totally unprepared for one.
    I couldn’t wait to get home.

    DebRo

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  8. Our local wildlife park does a scary walk every year around Halloween. It was always well attended over the two weeks that it was on offer. This reminds me that I have not seen any ads about it – I wonder? Anyway, the high school kids were the animators. They loved it and were sworn to secrecy as to what happened behind the scenes… all to scare the walkers. I cannot offer firsthand experience as it does not appeal to me.
    Melissa the hurricane is said to be coming our way for tomorrow night – rain (lots of it – yah! We had rain a few days ago – soft and gentle and more than we had all summer in total. At least the earth is primed to accept a deluge) and high winds. There is a lot of rumble about moving trick or treating to Saturday or just hold it in fire departments tomorrow night. We get no kids anyway, so will enjoy our crispy crunch bars by ourselves – possibly in the dark.

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  9. I am an expert on haunted Houses. My Uncle Horace was possessed by a Lithuanian plate spinner, but only on alternate Thurdays. My Cousin Thaddeus had what we thought was an imaginary friend whom he would give a ride home to after every high school dance, only to let her off at the local cemetery. Grandpa Elmer claimed the spirit of Jack the Ripper came to him on a full moon, at least that's what his defense lawyer asserted. And my younger brother Casper, who sadly passed in childhood, was the friendliest person you'd ever want to meet, even if he looked very pale.

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    1. Lucky Cousin Thaddeus, at least he had a regular ghoul friend.

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