Massachusetts residents are stocking up on candy this month as it’s getting closer to Halloween which means youngsters will be out and about in costumes going door to door to collect candy and other treats.
As everyone knows, there are all types of containers that the little ones will bring to collect their goodies including buckets of many colors. One color I remember seeing from time to time is blue. I remember seeing a child with a blue Halloween bucket when I was in Westfield for one Halloween. I also saw a couple of children with blue Halloween buckets at my home in Pittsfield over the years and I saw a blue Halloween bucket at a restaurant in West Springfield last year.
Not thinking too much about the colors of Halloween buckets, I recently learned that a child carrying a blue bucket on Halloween could mean that the individual has autism and the blue-colored bucket is used to spread autism awareness. In some cases with autism, the child could be nonverbal so rather than waiting for a child to ask “trick-or-treat”, if you see the blue bucket in the kid’s hand you’ll know to give out the candy without the “trick-or-treat” question. So, keep in mind, that a blue bucket could mean the child is nonverbal…