Today's Post is inspired by Sunny...
I have a complicated relationship with Valentine's Day. For the most part, I don't like this made-up holiday that tries to pressure me into doing something for that special someone. Funk dat! Let me do something nice because I want to, not because of an artificially created event that serves no purpose other than pressuring me into lining the pockets of Corporate America.
Going way back to my childhood, I remember being expected to participate in elementary school, and being required to give everyone in my class a valentine, including boys, and including people I didn't even like. I remember my mom and I going to pick up a box of Valentine's Day cards, and never having the exact right amount at the end. I remember trying to sort the cards so that my male friends got "cool" cards, the best cards went to the cutest girls, and the rest went to the people I didn't like. I vaguely recall this evil tradition ending in middle school.
Middle school and early high school were the awkward years, and boy was I awkward. Since I was toward the bottom end of the social ladder during that time, there was zero chance that I was going to be the dork who gave my crush a card, only to have her turn around and humiliate me by publicly rejecting me and loudly proclaiming "Hey everyone, Evan gave me a Valentine! Like that loser would have a chance with me," followed by derisive laughter from everyone in the school. Nope. Not gonna take that risk.
During my junior and senior year of high school, I came to grips with the fact that I'd never be part of the in crowd, and I was fine with that. I saw the social hierarchy of high school for what it was... a shallow popularity contest that I had no chance of winning... so I didn't play. The best way to describe me is a unique and slightly bizarre combination of John Bender, Brian Johnson and Allison Reynolds from Breakfast Club. I was boisterous and rebellious like Bender. I was nerdy like Brian. I was a nonconformist like Reynolds. I recall this generally working for me, because I never got stuffed into lockers, but I also didn't allow myself to get really close to a lot of people. I ran in virtually all of the cliques, but didn't exactly fit into any of them. So yeah, Valentine's Day wasn't a thing at that point.
The first time Valentine's Day really mattered to me, that $h!+ blew up in my face... big time. I was dating the woman who would become wife 1.0. I pulled out all the stops. I took her to a really fancy, expensive restaurant with an ocean view. I spent a $h!+ ton of money trying to demonstrate that I really liked this woman. I think I spent a full paycheck, but my memory is a bit fuzzy after 3+ decades. What I do recall is that she seemed a bit... under-appreciative... of the work I put into the date.
But wait, there's more! After a couple of weeks, she came to me, announcing that she was pregnant... and she wasn't sure the kid was mine. I was fooking crushed! She gave me some lame excuse that we 'hadn't discussed exclusive dating.' At that point, I had a choice... I could commit, or I could see her for what she was and run for the hills. I chose to commit, on the condition that she committed too. I very distinctly recall saying that she needed to $h!+ or get off the pot. We got married shortly thereafter.
At this point, I need to divert a bit and share that wife 1.0 was high maintenance and demanding. The entire world revolved around her. To this day, my girls say the same thing... as far as she's concerned, it's her world, and we're privileged to live in it. The entire time we were together, she expected fancy events and expensive stuff for Valentine's Day (and Mother's Day, and her birthday, and Christmas, and our anniversary,) because dammit, she was worth it... never realizing that her expectations wore a hole in my soul by forcing me to relive that first Valentine's Day. (By the way, the kid is mine.) As you can imagine, by the time we split up I outright resented Valentine's Day.
Fast forward several years... I had just started dating the woman who would become wife 2.2. Everything was exciting and new. We'd been dating a short time, but man, there was something about her! I invited her to my house for a Valentine's Day dinner and a quiet evening in. I was freaking giddy over this girl! I made her a mix tape of sappy music. (It was actually a CD, but you get the idea.) I made spaghetti from scratch (the sauce, not the noodles) and garlic bread. I served us some low-end red wine in the only two wine glasses I owned. My divorce was still in process and I was still broke, but I wanted to do something special.
It was the first Valentine's Day since 1.0 and I had split, but none of that mattered. It was just us. In a bizarre coincidence, future 2.2 and I decided that we were going to pursue this budding relationship. Now, here we are, 20+ years later and I love her as much as -- no, more than -- I did on that Valentine's Day so many years ago.
After all that time, I still have a complicated relationship with Valentine's Day. It's not because of 1.0, but that is a factor. It's primarily because I dislike the social expectations that accompany this commercialized pseudo-holiday. I really despise the idea that I should be expected to profess my devotion on a specific day each year, and the socially-expected manner of expression is by purchasing expensive flowers with a short shelf life and overpriced chocolate in a heart-shaped box.
I love my wife dearly. She knows it, and I know it. I express that love by sitting on the couch with her and taking turns with the remote to the only TV in the house. I demonstrate my feelings by holding her hand, kissing her, and hugging her each day we're together. I show that devotion by getting her flowers for no reason at all. I exhibit endearment by tackling all of the stereotypical male chores around the house while simultaneously sharing traditional wifely duties such as cooking, cleaning and laundry.
I will admit that we usually do something for Valentine's Day, but it's not the typical romantic dinner, chocolate, and dozen roses. It's usually not on Valentine's Day. We generally do something during the week because we get the sentiment behind the commercialism. As for my relationship with the holiday? Well, it's still complicated.