I realized somewhere along the way that love isn’t what happens to us on one day of the year or on a picture perfect date. It’s not exclusive to partnership either and doesn’t always look pretty or smell like roses. Love can be messy and confusing. Love is being broke and single and tired. Love is being married and working to put your partner through school. Love is taking care of yourself. It’s walking your dog. It’s recycling. It’s working through childhood issues. It’s letting go of judgement in a fight. It’s deciding to forgive yourself and move on.
Love is the ultimate power we share with all of life. The urge to create, to heal, to comfort, to nurture, to hold and protect, to inspire and to hope. It is the most human and also the most universal of energies. It is the reason we keep getting up in the morning no matter if it’s February 14th or if there is a heart shaped box of chocolates waiting for us from a secret admirer.
This year I have the urge to start reclaiming all the traditional American holidays and making them work for me instead of me getting worked up about not attaining some level of holiday perfection. Not that I’m particularly mad at sending cards or heart shaped candies. I do like Valentine’s Day in theory- but it’s time to run it through a nurture culture filter where we keep what we like and then design something better with the rest.
At North Fork 53 we held Hatsugama (first tea of the New Year) on January 1st because it felt like such a healing and honoring ceremony for our lives here on a tea farm. So repurposing Valentine’s Day for LOVE in my way will look different than yours. I encourage you to think about what fits your life, needs and style. We are all different and our hearts need different ways to express themselves. It’s less about how it’s done and more about intention shift. Most importantly it’s about not feeling constrained by rituals of a holiday that hasn’t evolved with our shifting culture and world.
What could Valentine’s Day reclaimed look like for nurture culture 2020?
For me I will be alone. My husband is in Massage School in Portland won’t be home until late that evening or the next morning. So I have time to think about how I want to honor LOVE in my own way. Honestly I do better loving him than I do myself so it’s more of a challenge to think of love not as romance but as deep nurturance. This is the most profound form of love. At our core we want to be cared for, acknowledged, seen and supported for the imperfect humans we all are. To LOVE another is to do this for them and to be LOVED is to be able to receive in return. It’s also the nature of LOVE to not get it right and to flounder, forgive, and try again. The challenge is to keep on LOVING through all of it.
Valentine’s Day in it’s commercialized form has taken this massive elemental mystical life experience and turned it into a narrow and exclusive club. It’s like taking the entire ocean and presenting it as one very expensive bottle of designer salt water that is only worthwhile if someone else buys it as a gift for you.
LOVE is the ocean. It’s the blood in our veins. It’s our birthright. It’s never not with us and we are never incapable of being loved or of loving. It of course starts with our own self. For as RuPaul so famously says “If you don’t love yourself, how in the hell you gonna love somebody else?”
So the parts I’m keeping.