[QUOTE=Cuchulain82]I hear the words, but I don't know how to take it to heart. IMO, every woman has a soft spot for romance. V-Day is so difficult because if you buy into the idea of "romance", you almost have to buy into the idea of V-Day. I believe that you haven't ever deliberately celebrated V-Day, but are you sure you haven't ever, not even once, done something a little special... and this just happen to occur near the middle of February?
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/)
I still think that all the hearts, cards, flowers, and general buzz about romance during that time of year creates an expectation. However, maybe this is just an American thing- in Europe and Canada, V-Day may not exist in the same way (and if that is the case, you European and Canadian men should
treasure that lucky break
![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/)
)
I agree. You should be with someone because you want to be with them. Almost always that is not easy, but your SO should make you happy. Love, though complicated, is usually worth it
![Big Grin :D](./images/smilies/)
[/QUOTE]
*grins* I'm pretty weird where VDay is concerned. I genuinely have never, even deep down, wished for some kind of "romantic," gesture from my partner on that date. In Canada, VDay is as big a deal as in the US. But, for a long time it was much less so in Europe. I was born in Europe and have spent a lot of time there, so it is very probable that I've been culturally influenced. That being said, I quite often will give cards to close male friends on VDay, and they will give them to me. Perhaps I'm comfortable with this because it does somewhat defy the usual expectations, I'm not quite sure.
Yes, my partner and I have done special things around the middle of February, but that has been to celebrate his birthday and my son's birthday.
(My SO is born on the 16 th, our son on the 12 th... while I was pregnant we were actually mortified at the possibility that our child could be born on either Vday or my SO's birthday ![Big Grin :D](./images/smilies/)
)
lol! That last part of your post is one loaded understatement !
![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/)
Indeed, yes, one's partner should make them happy, but of course there are times when this is not the case, and things become rocky. This is one point where relationships are decidedly complicated. Successfully maintaining a relationship takes so much hard work, and I have the feeling many people don't realise just how much hard work is actually entailed. For example, I have a terminally single friend who has a distinctly idealised view of relationships (and she becomes profoundly depressed on VDay
![Roll Eyes :rolleyes:](./images/smilies/)
); I am always telling her she has no idea just how much easier it is to be single, but she never really grasps what I mean.
This is part of what is so sad where Vday and similar concepts are concerned, IMO. There is such incredible emphasis in our society on an appointed day for flowers and "romance," yet so little attention is paid to all of those underlying things that truly count. *sigh*