Today we have a post from Alexandria, another proud lover of Valentine’s Day! Read on for her ideas on doing Valentine’s Day your way, not Kay Jewelers’ way. (Unless, of course, that’s your thang.) — RW

When I was growing up, holidays were always a big deal for my family and Valentine’s Day was no exception. My dad really knew how to celebrate. We even had Valentine’s Day stockings. I’m. Not. Kidding.
My love of celebrating Valentine’s Day has continued into adulthood. For my husband, it is both a blessing and a curse to be married to someone who is preparing to give and do so much on Valentine’s Day, but also expects so much in return. However, the Valentine’s Day that I see on every Kay commercial ever made is just not us. For us, Valentine’s Day (or any holiday) is a great day to eat a marvelous meal with someone you care about and spend some time under the sheets doing something besides checking our Facebook and snuggling with the cat. Which is fine, because the beautiful thing about starting your own little family means being able to re-invent holidays and creating new traditions. (Dad would be proud.)
Here’s how we’re taking back Valentine’s Day:
Coming from a large Italian family, I know that the most important part of any holiday is sharing a meal together. A large meal. With carbs. But I don’t believe in going out to eat on Valentine’s Day. It feels fake. I just don’t understand why going out to eat is such a big deal, especially when it’s an overpriced prix fixe menu of crap I probably don’t want to eat anyway. So instead, I make something festive: pasta with red sauce, heart-shaped pizza…heck, heart-shaped anything. Cooking at home (together) is fun and sexy. (My husband in the kitchen? Yowza!)
Even though we aren’t going out to eat, another Nolan family tradition is to give our appearances a little extra pizazz. For me, it can just be doing a little extra with my hair, or makeup — anything that makes me feel sexy can really set the mood and remind me of how I was splitting with excitement for our first Valentine’s Day together. And I like to remind him that he is in fact married to a woman, not a bag lady. (Some people might mistake sweat pants for laziness. Crazy, right?) For my husband, it’s a little extra hair wax, a spray or two of cologne, and maybe a few push-ups make him look a little more like Christian Grey. These little things that we do that seem shallow or unimportant are really our way of reaffirming to each other that our relationship is still important, still valid…that we are both worth trying to impress. And that’s a powerful romantic gesture.
On Valentine’s Day, or any special date night, we also make it a rule to ban technology. (We also ban technology on days when we’re either about to crawl into our phones and live in them or, conversely, chuck them out the window.) It’s so easy to get overly-plugged in, so bogged down with all of our “online responsibilities;” there are nights when we get in bed and realize we haven’t even spoken beyond discussing how good the quiche was that we had for dinner. That’s. Pathetic.
Making time to give each other our undivided attention is better than any bouquet of flowers, fancy dinner, or expensive jewelry (although I never mind getting attention AND jewelry). Being able to talk to my husband and really talk and really listened to, that’s a memory made that trumps any Hallmark — St. Valentine, Patron Saint of Beekeepers — holiday. (Seriously, look it up.)
Yes, it’s an oft-misinterpreted holiday that’s easy to dismiss as stupid, but celebrating love is a good thing. If the “traditional” way of celebrating isn’t for you, then make your own holiday that reflects who you are as a couple and represents the parts of your relationship that are most important to you. We put in the work to reclaim Valentine’s Day to make it a celebration of our relationship, not a copy of a Kay commercial. I just wish we had stockings.
How do you make Valentine’s Day your own?
–
Alexandria Nolan is a misplaced Michigander currently living in the wilds of the Houston urban jungle. Her blog, Greetings from Nolandia, focuses on health, fitness, travel and relationships. When she’s not writing, she’s getting fit, traveling or having a relationship with her husband, Terrence and her cat, Jables.
Want to contribute to The House Always Wins? Submit your work here.


{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }
As a fellow holiday worshiper, I’m loving these guest posts. I think sometimes Valentine’s Day is dismissed as cheesy but there are no rules about how these things are celebrated. Make it your own.
Great post! I agree that sharing a meal and giving each other your undivided attention is the most important part. My husband and I cook and eat in almost every night, so we are going out for our V-day celebration– although we are doing it on Friday the 15th so we could easily get reservations at the place we wanted and NOT have to do the prix fix thing!
Jill recently posted..Home Blowout Attempt
My family also took any opportunity to celebrate any and everything. Best Valentine’s gift ever? A thesaurus and dictionary from my parents that was inscribed “there aren’t enough words to describe how much we love you.”
This year, I’m working late but my partner is cooking me a special dinner and I will put my phone away for the entirety of the meal. I also want to make her a card – we love to make cards that are personalized and find meaningful quotes…I may nab the “Falling in Love is Like Owning a Dog” poem that Rachel posted.
I am proud of you Alex! I am also happy for you! You have a great attitude, a loving thoughful approach to life and people, a healthy lifestyle, determination, wisdom and a good marraige to a fantastic husband in Terrence!
Great post! I have always loved Valentine’s Day (even when I was single and my other single friends were hating on it… I would make them handmade valentines in the same way my Grandma and I would when I was a kid). Last year my boyfriend and I feasted on a heart shaped mushroom/onion/bleu cheese pizza, a heart shaped funfetti cake, and heart shaped chocolate chip walnut pancakes the next morning.
I always sent Valentine’s too all my friends when I was single too! And seriously, how can anyone hate on a holiday that is celebrated with heart-shaped chocolate chip walnut pancakes?!?!
I am so glad that other people get so into the whole smarmy Valentine’s Day thing. I wish there was an excuse to eat heart shaped foods on a regular basis! Thanks for reading my guest post xoxo
{ 1 trackback }