Why This Divorce Attorney Will Celebrate Valentine's Day on Friday the 13th
The
first thought that may come to your mind is irony perhaps. I do love irony, and
it is generally not lost on me that I am a divorce attorney writing once again
about love. My celebration of Valentine's Day on Friday the 13th is a bit less
macabre that it sounds -- well, ever so slightly. After 21 years of being a
divorce attorney, one would expect I might be a touch of a cynic. Well, you
caught me. I love everything about love but Valentine's Day does it. It brings
out the full-blown pessimist in me. Valentine's Day is the mandatory day for
showing love and affection to those we hold dear, right? There are those cards,
written by the finest Hallmark writers who somehow have crawled inside our very
soul and poured out onto this $8.95 card just exactly how we love each other
(How do they do this? It is magical.) Of course, they are so picked through by
the end of January this may have you sending the one you purchased on February
12th at CVS, wishing your sweetheart a happy first year of marriage, when you have
actually been married for 10. Let us not forget there are the expensive flowers
and boxes of mystery chocolates, the Prix Fixe menu at your favorite
restaurant. Just horrible, the indignity of it all, I lament.
I
clearly remember my childhood was full of wonderful Valentine's memories. There
were shoe boxes decorated with pink and red hearts and white paper doilies
awaiting the tiny Valentine's in the box or if you're lucky, a taped on
lollipop. I remember conversation hearts and the absolute happiness I felt when
my then fairly new stepmom got us each the little red heart shaped box of
Russell Stover candies, which of course, meant she "loved" us. I am
my father's daughter; they say, and I think my Valentine's Day aversion came
from him. I am quite sure I was seven. My dad called it a made-up holiday, a
greeting card company conspiracy, if you will, forcing people to proclaim love.
I grew up to be someone who espoused if not at best a "not my favorite
holiday" commentary to at the worst, someone who regularly reminded my
significant other, I can't stand Valentine's Day. I would happily concur with
my husband that the restaurants are too full, the food is always terrible, and
the flowers are too expensive and a waste of money. I am fully insulated by ever
being disappointed on Valentine's Day, ever. No matter what.
So,
as Valentine's Day approaches again, I begin to wonder why I never really liked
the holiday once I "grew up." The answer was surprisingly simple.
Expectations: If you have them, you might get hurt. I don't like being hurt,
especially by those I love. On Valentine's Day people are expected to show they
love you in some big, over the top expression of love and if not, well, I guess
you just are not "loved." Maybe there is a fear of no one really
loving me truly. Maybe it is the fear of being disappointed or of disappointing
someone else by not showing them the exact right way that I love them. Fear of
the love not being real, because it is forced. But these expectations, these
fears, are just my silly excuses to insulate myself from the pain I see every
day. Quite frankly, they are a poor excuse to dislike a day that celebrates
love. I realize that while my days are spent managing expectations as a divorce
lawyer maybe a little too much of this had seeped into my life.
But
my daughter Ella is not having any of it. Ella came along shortly after
Valentine's Day in 2010. She came into this world fighting to breathe and to
live. We loved her alive, if it is at all humanly possible to pour so much love
into a child she just lives, we did it. And she has spent every minute of every
day giving it back to everyone she meets. So now as the holiday again
approaches, I feel like my Grinch-like Valentine's Day attitude is starting to
melt away. Maybe it is that little 4-year-old of mine with her big, brown eyes
spending hours writing the four letters of her name 19 times with equal
excitement for each little friend as she states for each and every card she
just "loves them so much!" Love, pure and simple, no rhyme or reason,
just hearts overflowing. What's not to celebrate about that?
So
this year, I will celebrate on Friday the 13th not out of my keen sense of
irony, but because I will be a classroom mom helper for a room full of little
loves in Valentine's themed shirts watching them exchange their tiny
expressions of love painstakingly autographed with their still chubby little
hands. I will keep my promise on the 13th and the 14th and everyday thereafter,
to love out loud.
My
mom used to say, "people will live up to your low expectations of
them." So this Valentine's Day, I will try to not be afraid or lower my
expectations just to avoid being disappointed and enjoy the love exactly how it
comes, and when it comes. I will be confident I am loved. I will be more like
Ella, who "loves everyone in the world, even the people she hasn't met
yet." She does that every day, and she sure doesn't skip Valentine's Day.
I will use it as just another opportunity to say I love you. We just don't get
enough of those, do we?
Comments
Post a Comment