Valentine’s Day Is Loved by Many
If you think that Valentine’s Day is just for lovers, maybe you
should think again. Go into any card shop today, and you will see
Valentine cards for everyone including priests, rabbis, ministers, and
mailmen. Every pet shop has dog bones and catnip wrapped in red hearts
and bows. Yes, this expansion of the age-old Valentine’s
Day idea is a huge marketing ploy to entice the consumer to purchase
more. This may not be a bad idea; now everyone is given the opportunity
to enjoy the occasion if they choose to do so.
According to the Greeting Card
Association, many Americans enjoy celebrating Valentine’s Day. It is
estimated that one billion Valentine cards are sent each year, making
Valentine's Day the second largest card-sending event of the year.
What’s first? You guessed it. An estimated 2.6 billion cards are sent
at Christmas.
Endless love…The History of Valentine’s Day
Originally a pagan love festival, the Roman feast of Lupercalia was
Christianized in memory of the martyr-priest, St. Valentine, who was
killed in AD 270. Possibly because his feast on February 14 was close
to the fertility festival Lupercalia, Valentine became known as a
patron of lovers. During the Middle Ages, Valentine became associated
with the union of lovers under conditions of duress.
Valentine's Day became popular in Great Britain in the seventeenth
century. By the middle of the eighteenth century, it was common
practice for friends and lovers in every social class to exchange small
tokens of affection or handwritten notes. Printed cards became the
vogue by the end of the century. The rest is history as the tradition
spread to America, Canada, Mexico, France, and Australia.
A Modern Way to Enjoy an Ancient Celebration
Looking for Valentine’s Day links on the Internet is certainly an
experience. It seems that a search on Valentine’s Day leads to love,
which leads to sex, which leads to many of the shall-we-say more risqué
areas of the Net. However, in my wanderings I found some cute,
wholesome sites that you may want to peruse.
Greetings for Your Valentine
Be sure to visit the AARP’s free greeting card service
where you will find a variety of free electronic greeting cards. Choose
a traditional greeting for your honey like “Be Mine,” or send a “Big
Hug” to anyone who needs it. One of my other favorite greeting card
sites,Blue Mountain Arts,
has recently started charging for many of their cards, but if you don’t
find a card you like at the AARP Web site, you may want to visit Blue
Mountain to see what they have to offer. If you would like to send a
really memorable greeting, order a Singing Valentine for your loved one delivered by a live barbershop quartet.
For the Family
For heart-filled kitchen creations, visit The Cupid Connection
at the Kitchen Link’s Guide to What’s Cooking on the Net. The Kitchen
Link offers romantic dinner recipes and Valentine treats of their own,
but their links to other Valentine recipes are especially outstanding.
If you are interested in food, you won’t want to miss the Epicurious Valentine’s Day
area. Home of Bon Appetit and Gourmet Magazines, the Epicurious site
gives some great recipes for heart shaped food, like the mouth-watering
Chocolate Truffle Linzer Heart. There is plenty of other great
love-related information here as well. It’s the place to surf to if you
want to learn about setting a romantic table, and you’ll even find
articles like “Nectar Meets Ambrosia,” a listing of beers that pair
well with chocolate.
For more Valentine’s Day family fun, visit About.com’s Valentine Fun for Families
which provides links to Valentine content all over the Web, as well as
giving ideas for kid’s Valentine parties, games and crafts for kids,
and Valentine activities for fun and learning.
Finding the Right Gift
If after twenty-five years or more of marriage, you’ve run out of good ideas for Valentine’s Day, try a quick visit to Surprise.com.
Unique categories and advanced filtering technology result in gift
selections that are sure to be right-on-target for your sweetheart.
Look up your recipient by personality. The list includes distinctive
qualities like Empty-Nester, Avid Reader, Always Cold, Gadgeteer,
Golfer, Gardener, Has the Blues, and Loves to Travel.
Another list allows you to find presents for everyone including
teachers, single dads, kid’s coaches, new grandparents, fathers,
mothers, business associates, etc. The uniqueness of the presents is
sure to catch your eye. How about a chocolate-scented flower plant for
a chocoholic, Hawaiian coffee for a caffeine fiend, or an exotic car
rental for a real car lover? Or take a look at some of the Hottest
Valentine’s Day Gifts this year, like personalized fortune cookies,
long-stemmed strawberry roses, and satin sheets.
This site provides links to all the suggested products. Even if you
don’t buy anything, it’s a great site to visit and is sure to give you
lots of gift ideas.
Get Smaltzy
Enjoy Love Letters
compliments of the US Postal Service, which shares an impressive
collection of love letters. Love letters and notes from such famous
people at Napoleon Bonaparte, Oliver Cromwell, and other successful
authors and well-known figures are especially appropriate to review at
this time of year.
Be sure to use the Internet to help you enjoy Valentine’s Day,
whatever your romantic status. And remember that true love is in the
eye of the beholder. After all, it was Henry VIII who
officially declared February 14th as the day when a message of
everlasting love should be delivered to your object of desire. Remember
Henry had many objects of desire; he was married six times.