halloween

Several carved and illuminated Halloween pumpkins with various spooky faces and shapes. 0

How to Make Halloween Fun During Covid-19

Families with children on the autism spectrum know what it’s like to crave quiet time, especially on the chaos-filled days surrounding holidays like Halloween. Here’s a calming activity you can create at home: create a sensory-friendly Halloween display using dim lighting, soothing colors, and soft decorations to help regulate emotions during a typically overwhelming celebration.

Three children in Halloween costumes sit at a table with candy and pumpkin decorations. 0

Avoid the Halloween Candy Blues

Halloween Candy Blues: How Synthetic Food Dyes May Be Behind Your Child’s Post-Halloween Behavior After all that sugary fun, many parents find their kids acting out in unexpected ways. Turns out, those synthetic food dyes hiding in Halloween treats might be the real culprit behind the moodiness and temper tantrums that follow.

Three children wear DIY Halloween disguises made from pipe cleaners. 0

Create your own Disguises for Halloween

Get ready to burst into giggles with some pipe cleaner-made Halloween disguises. Using glue dots or tape and colorful wires, craft unique accessories—from spy glasses to antennae headbands and flowers—turning kids into bugs, superheroes, or mythical creatures. Perfect for playful trick-or-treating or a fun family activity that sparks creativity and imagination.

Collage of children in Halloween costumes, including a cowboy, a princess, and a bee. 2

10 Halloween Safety Tips for Children with Special Needs

Make Halloween safer and more enjoyable for your special needs children. From choosing visible costumes to planning routes, learn simple tips that transform trick or treating into a worry-free treat hunt, plus sensory-smart costume ideas. Start stress-free celebrations today!

A jack-o'-lantern bucket filled with dry ice sits among Halloween candy and spiderwebs. 0

Kids and Halloween Candy: A Recipe for Disaster

Feel the Halloween anxiety? You’re not alone. What if sugar isn’t the real culprit behind those post-candy jitters? A growing body of research suggests petroleum-based dyes may be to blame for behavioral chaos.

Jack-o'-lantern wearing a detective hat with a magnifying glass. 2

Help Make Halloween Fun for ALL Kids!

Make Halloween magical for every kiddo! Whether it’s a sticker collection, toy stash, or temporary tattoos adorning their fingertips, ensuring all children can trick-or-treat on Halloween is simpler than you think.

Collage of painted and decorated pumpkins for Halloween. 1

No Carve Pumpkin Ideas

Transform your Halloween spirit with No Carve Pumpkin Decorating Ideas that blend artistry, magic and simple joy. Sparkly alternatives captivate the senses; Young House Love’s adorable tape-finger paintings breathe life onto pumpkin canvases while parents embrace creativity through DIY costumes for cherished family moments together—and don’t forget Mr.

Halloween candy bucket with candy and wrapped sweets 0

The Scary Truth about Halloween Candy

Halloween Candy vs. Hardware Store Chemicals When it comes to artificial additives, your child’s candy likely packs a punch compared to what you might find on store shelves. Studies link these dyes and chemicals to behavioral issues in kids – even dubbed “Halloween Hangover” by parents.

Child dressed as a mummy. 0

Are You My Mummy?

Turn Your Child into a Playful Monster with Just an Ace Bandage Unroll an ace bandage and wrap it around your little one to transform them into a whimsical mummy. This playful activity boosts proprioceptive input, challenges balance, sparks imagination, and fosters awareness of others’ bodies.

Secret Link