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The History of Halloween

10/31/2015

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The origin of the festival of Halloween has long been disputed, and the truth is that it has emerged from both pagan and Christian practices into the celebration that exists today.

Essentially, Halloween began with the Celtic pagan festival of Samhain, meaning 'Summer's End' which celebrates the end of harvest season. For thousands of years, our ancestors marked Samhain from sundown on October 31 until sundown on November 1 as the dying of the light before the winter.

The Celts believed that it was a time when the walls between our world and the next became thin and porous, allowing spirits to pass through, coming back to life on the day of Samhain to damage their crops. Places were set at the dinner table to appease and welcome the spirits. People would offer them food and drink, and light bonfires to ward off the evil spirits.
When the dead arrived, they were able to walk among us and be mistaken for us. That’s why we dress up to look like them. That way maybe we’ll fool them into thinking we’re dead as well and they won’t take us back with them. 

The Christian origin of the holiday is that it falls on the days before the feast of All Hallows, which was set in the eighth century to attempt to stamp out pagan celebrations. Christians would honour saints and pray for souls who have not yet reached heaven.

Celts dressed up in white with blackened faces during the festival of Samhain to trick the evil spirits that they believed would be roaming the earth before All Saints' Day on November 1st.

By the 11th century, this had been adapted by the Church into a tradition called 'souling'. Children go door-to-door, asking for soul cakes in exchange for praying for the souls of friends and relatives. They went dressed up as angels, demons or saints.

The origins of trick or treating and dressing up go back to the 16th century in Ireland, Scotland and Wales where people went door-to-door in costume asking for food in exchange for a poem or song. Many dressed up as souls of the dead, or Aos Si, and were protecting themselves from the spirits by impersonating them.

Costumes became more adventurous - in Victorian ages, they were influenced by gothic themes in literature, and dressed as bats and ghosts or what seemed exotic, such as an Egyptian pharaoh.

The phrase trick-or-treat was first used in America in 1927, with the traditions brought over to America by immigrants. 

Halloween 2015: Why do children trick-or-treat and what's with the scary costumes?

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My Sexy Saturday ~ Our Sexy Date

10/2/2015

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Welcome to the 112th week of My Sexy Saturday. This week’s theme is Our Sexy Date

A sexy date could be anything. The day they first went out, the day they first kissed, the day they got married. It could be a couple’s sexy anniversary date or maybe a date to meet for the very first time. It could be a date in space, a foreign country or just around the corner.

As always, the rules of My Sexy Saturday are that the excerpt should be 7 paragraphs or 7 sentences or 7 words that covey true sexiness between the characters. My excerpt this week comes from A Kiss for a Highlander. 

Excerpt
He danced her out into the hall and paused under the chandelier. Martha, still recovering from the shock of his last words, threw him an enquiring glance, and he pointed up to where a solitary sprig of mistletoe nestled amid the greenery above their heads. “How on earth did you manage to smuggle that past Mrs. Glover?”

“She knows all about it,” Fraser informed her with a hint of smugness. “I have her blessing.”

The blaze of passion as she looked up into his eyes was so unexpected that, for a second, she wondered if her knees would hold her. She no longer had time to wonder anything. Fraser slid one hand around her waist and the other to the back of her neck. This close, his hazel eyes were mesmerizing, and she wasn’t sure if it was his heart or her own that thundered in her ears. She gripped the ruffles at the front of Fraser’s shirt tightly.

His breath stroked her cheek. “I have you, lass. I won’t let you fall.”

He kissed her. Momentarily, his lips were unexpectedly soft. Then his mouth was hard and demanding against hers, and his tongue swept inside, caressing and exploring her mouth. Martha rose onto the tips of her toes. Following her instincts, she pressed her body closer to Fraser’s. Her eyes widened as she felt the contrasting hardness of his body against the soft curves of her own. There was a primeval rightness about the feeling. It seemed natural to try to cleave ever nearer to him, as though parts of their bodies were actually made to fit together. Gradually she began to enjoy the new sensations, surrendering herself to them until they became quite intoxicating. A corresponding fizz of pleasure entered her bloodstream, and her whole body started to tingle.

So this was why people liked kissing! It was something she’d occasionally wondered about, almost as a disinterested bystander. After all, she had never, until now, imagined it would happen to her. She had been quite unable to imagine why there would be anything appealing about having another person’s mouth on her own. The thought of allowing another person to put his tongue inside her mouth had been something she found quite alarming. Now, shyly, Martha used her own tongue to explore Fraser’s mouth in return. He tasted of the wine they had drunk and of spices. He tasted delicious. Instantly, he tangled his hand in her hair, turning her head to the angle he wanted, deepening the kiss to bittersweet intensity. The tingling in her body increased and seemed to become more concentrated at a specific, exhilarating point. Here she was—Miss Martha Wantage, spinster of this parish—standing beneath the mistletoe, in the arms of a man she had known less than a month, with her tongue in his mouth and a wanton pulse beating between her legs. The mistletoe was certainly unleashing its mischief on this maiden’s behaviour.

That was when her knees did give way. But Fraser was true to his word and he didn’t let her fall.

A Kiss for a Highlander is available from: 
Amazon 
Samhain 
Barnes and Noble
Kobo
iTunes
Google Play

A Kiss for a Highlander is a finalist in The Romance Reviews (TRR) Reader's Choice Awards. If you've enjoyed this excerpt, it would be wonderful if you could stop by and vote for it here. 
You do need to create an account to register, but it's free and easy and you get to hear about other great romance books. Thank you for supporting my steamy highland romance!  
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If you want to find out more about My Sexy Saturday, please click here
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Readers, please visit us at our new Author Central where we’ll be sharing even more from our authors besides Saturday’s snippets. We’d love to have each and everyone of you there!

Don't forget to check out this week's other My Sexy Saturday Bloggers!

Kacey Hammell
April Kelley
S. J. Maylee
Unrandom Randomness - Bronwyn Heeley
Kandi Silvers
Peggy jaeger
Daryl Devore
Victoria Adams
Capri Montgomery
Netherland Dreams
Lucy Felthouse
Jessica E. Subject
Lily Harlem
Ashe Barker
Sabrina Devonshire Romances
Marie Tuhart
Ruth Staunton
KC Kendricks Between the Keys
Jaye Peaches
Tamara Lush
Draven St. James- Lost in the Fire
Shelli Rosewarne
Tali Spencer
Heloise West
Aubrey Cara
Lisa Carlisle
Pick a Genre Already - H K Carlton
Once Upon a Story. . . with Jina Bacarr
XtraOrdinary Romance
Christiane France
Alexis Alvarez
Lilactyme Productions
​Title Magic Savanna Kougar
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