Thirty
years ago today, when I was nearly six, I got a brother for Valentine's
Day. Now mind you, I was not the little girl pining away for a
sibling, someone to dress up in little clothes and coddle and nurture.
I already had adoring parents, a dog, a kitten, a pony...who needs a
little sister or brother to encroach on all that great turf? But
nevertheless, a little brother I got. And that is when my confliction
with Valentine's Day began.
How
can someone you're not all that thrilled about get their own holiday,
complete with school parties, candy, cards, a color theme? I tried not
to be hostile about this growing up, but I didn't really see the
fairness of him, a boy even, getting such a boon when my own birthday
never even happened while we were in school. One the last day of
school, all of us summer birthday kids would get all lumped together
with a generic, "Have a great summer! Oh, and happy birthday, too."
Boring. Completely anticlimactic. And what kind of cruel injustice
makes it a holiday focused on sugar and love, when really, you might
like to take this dirty little boy outside and leave him for the wolves?
I
muddled along with a sense of benign indifference to this silly
midwinter day. And then came middle school. Ugh. Could there be
anything more horrid and conflicted than Valentine's Day being
celebrated by bunch of clumsy, bumbling blobs of hormones? This is past
the days when you were required to give Valentines to everyone. Now
you got to single out the people you liked, or at least not acknowledge
the weird kid who hides under the table. Valentine's Day became a day
for a vast spectrum of awkwardness, hurt feelings, a little cruelty, and
sometimes a lucky strike. My first boyfriend, who I guess I didn't
even know was my boyfriend at the time, gave me an enormous stuffed bear
for Valentine's Day. It was on my desk after recess (How did he do
that?!). Given that I wasn't really sure he was my boyfriend, I
obviously hadn't purchased anything for him. That would have just been
awkward. But the bear cleared that up in a hurry. But that sweet, kind
gesture was clouded by the panic of (non) reciprocity. Crap! Now I
have to buy a gift for a 12 year old boy. What?! What on earth do they
like?! And I live in Whitefield! Crap again!! Upon seeing me drag
this enormous bear off the bus, embarrassed and elated, my fabulous,
somewhat befuddled and amused mom beelined me to LaVerdier's in
Littleton to find something appropriate, which I think ended up being a
model car. Which I then delivered to First Boyfriend* at his house,
quickly and tersely with some lame excuse as to why I didn't have it at
school and why we couldn't stay, because we had to get home for my
brother's birthday.
I
still have that bear. He's missing an eye and lives on a bench at my
parents' house, standing sentinel over the other childhood toys. That
day marked my first "real" Valentine's Day, and now looking back in
retrospect, the last time (until today) I was unsure about whether or
not I actually had a Valentine. Since I was 11 years old, I have never
been without a Valentine, some boy to claim me as his on this silly
Hallmark holiday. In high school and through college I out and out
boycotted the day, which I suppose is easier to do when you are sure
there is someone willing to (not) celebrate it with you. I lambasted it
as capitalist, materialist, fake. If you could not be nice to someone
the other 364 days of the year, why choose this one to make up for it?
And yet I still received countless chocolates and flowers, books, and later,
lingerie, dinner, sex (and more flowers and chocolate).*
I
am not a hater of sweet gestures or shmarmy shows of affection. I like
the colors pink and red. It's not that I'm not a romantic. I love
soft, touchy things, fireplaces and feather mattresses, walks or drives
that end on the edge of moonlit water, a beautiful meal, someone to rub
my back and stroke my hair, dancing close, love notes, little just right
objects and inside jokes, and yes, sex and flowers and chocolates. But
for the love of all that is good, please, not on Valentine's Day.
*Highlights reel:
First
Boyfriend (whose middle name-no kidding- happens to be Valentine) later
became First Kiss (First Slow Dance went to the hot 8th grade boy who
got up the courage to ask before First Boyfriend got around to it). I
broke up with him because he like the TV show MacGuiver better than he
liked me. Or so it seemed at the time. I went to his wedding this past
summer.
Best
Valentine's present: A bouquet of daisies from my best friend, who
happened to be a guy. We were both dating someone else, but we loved
each other dearly. Completely unexpected and hence perfect.
Whopper gifts I've given: My virginity. Yup, trite and true. Probably should have stuck with chocolates or cologne.
Most
Awkward: A bouquet of roses from a friend who I had no intention of
dating. Ever. He became a Special Ops Marine killing machine. I hope
that was not my fault, but perhaps the world is a safer place because of
me.
Second
Most Awkward: A purple silk nightie and thong from Victoria's Secret.
Nice try, but a swing and a miss. Wrong color, bad style for my body
type. Just not really me.
Most
recently most awkward: Flowers from my estranged husband, delivered
while he was traveling out of town with his mistress. But I guess they
are pretty and the vase is heavy enough to use as a bludgeoning object.
Friday, February 15, 2013
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