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[personal profile] jack
Last year I posted http://cartesiandaemon.livejournal.com/296126.html. The response was sufficiently positive I felt I should repost a slightly cut down version here.

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Every year there's a bit of a blat-blat about valentines day, with some people (and all advertising) going over the top, many people feeling pissed off, many people justifying it.

Is it worth celebrating valentines? Certainly. Love is a great thing, we have days to celebrate all sorts of crap, why not this?

Is there a good reason people get annoyed? Certainly. The problem isn't people who celebrate themselves, but a lot of advertising suggesting you have to.

Should we cancel valentines? I don't think so. Do we cancel Christmas to avoid upsetting people with no families? Do we cancel New Years to avoid upsetting people who can't drink? Do we cancel Easter or Ramadan to avoid upsetting people of different or no religion? Do we cancel sysadmin appreciation day because 99% of the population think it's stupid? All (except the last) are too noticeable to simply ignore. But we do make an effort to reach out to people without families on Christmas, etc.

Why not tomorrow take the opportunity to think of people you love in different ways? Is there anyone you owe a kiss? Have you told your best friend that they are your best friend? Did you ever ring your father up just to say you love him?

OK, I'm being sappy, but I know about 30% of you need some cheering up. Everyone else please continue being sappy or sarcastic as appropriate.

ETA: For that matter, two alternative celebrations have been suggested, too late for this year, but good, in that they're not anti-romantic, but a-romantic, an alternative for people who don't want to complain about romance, but want to do something else:

1. Garlic party day
2. Randomly chop some heads off or burn people on wheels or whatever supposedly happened to supposed St. Valentine.

Date: 2008-02-13 03:30 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] rjw76
By the way, I am married and hate it. I resent being told when and how to celebrate something I should be conscious of all year round.

And the pink. Oh, gods, the pink.

Date: 2008-02-13 03:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rysmiel.livejournal.com
By the way, I am married and hate it.

This sentence invites a particularly unfortunate misreading, fwiw.

Date: 2008-02-13 04:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cartesiandaemon.livejournal.com
By the way, I am married and hate it. I resent being told when and how to celebrate something I should be conscious of all year round.

I know what you mean. But I actually think it's more of a reaction to it being so overblown, commercialised, fake, one-up-ful and over-pink. I think every-one works out it's quite tacky sooner or later.

But most special days (Christmas, talk-like-a-pirate, St. George's day) are a recognition of something that could apply at any time, and we don't resent them for it. So boycotting the whole idea rather makes sense, but contrariwise, so does ignoring the pink and doing something sensible.

Also, *hugs* :)