Valentines day is still well over a month away but somehow it’s already everywhere. Hearts, chocolate, roses and big fuzzy teddy bears galore. Unlike most other holidays of the year, I have no sincere memories of February 14th. It’s never been a thing that I have taken super seriously which is kind of weird since I consider myself a closet romantic. I mean.. ew gross everything. There just hasn’t been a good moment or the right person where I’d find myself vulnerable enough to open up to celebrating a silly, made-up day. Not yet anyways.
However, all this Valentine’s day stuff has me thinking about the celebrations of love and the meaning of romance in a day-to-day context. It always fascinated me how people say I love you in unique ways. Sometimes that’s a hand on the shoulder at the right moment or a cup of hot coffee in the morning or sharing their lunch with you. You see, I’ve always been a very vocal person. I think that I show my love in tangible ways. I’d bake cakes for friends and cookies for co-workers or remember the blazer my friend picked out at Value Village and surprise her with it. I have and always will take tiny mental notes about the people who are closest to me (likes: kit-kat bars, belly rubs, good whiskey).
As I get older, I realize that different and yet equally important ways of loving are more needed from me than the take-home stuff or knocking the ball out of the park kind of gestures. These are the scarier things. Letting someone see me cry. Telling a story about my childhood that I’m embarrassed by or a trivial fact of my existence (hates: olives, certain kinds of mushrooms, doesn’t trust lettuce from Subway). The thing is, these kinds of admissions feel so similar to confession. The kind they used to shove me in every Friday at my Catholic school. Back then I would make up sins to repent for but twenty-two years into this life thing, I have enough to account for. I confess that I am not always the kindest person. I confess that I sometimes need to be alone. I confess that I am terrified, tired, in love, broken, whole, a person, a woman. I confess that I have no idea where I’m going next. I confess. I confess to you. So, I’m reminded of a Syvia Plath quote, “And when at last you find someone to whom you feel you can pour out your soul, you stop in shock at the words you utter – they are so rusty, so ugly. So meaningless and feeble from being kept in the small, cramped dark inside of you for so long.”
When I was small, I always imagined I’d meet an Englishman and flee to the countryside where I’d write novels and he’d do … something. Or when I was twelve that moved more towards an Englishman and I (at this point, decidedly I would have short, dark brown hair and wear only black turtlenecks) living in London while I wrote madly successful plays and he also.. did something. Whatever. The specifics were never that important. I imagined we’d be passionate about each other to the point of insanity. We’d be in on that shared secret and oh yeah, we’d have that untouchable, lusty flame. The timing on everything would be perfect. We’d never be faced with challenges and we’d never hurt each other. We’d always be that train arriving at the station at exactly half-past eight in an exciting yet reliable way. My earliest fantasies of love are things that everyone should strive for but, like bad television, exclude famine, fire and flood. I use that phase in relation to the fact that really caring for someone is a constant admission of flaws and willingness to step back and tinker things that might not be working as well as they could. I’ve never been able to believe that there is someone out there that’s perfect for you but I have always believed that everyone has a person. In my mind, the person is a someone that you meet who really makes a lifetime of flaws and fixings (… and famines and fires and floods) totally something you’d really do for the first time in your life. Real love requires fluidity. Change. Willingness. It requires us to confess. To be as we are, whatever that is in the moment and it builds only with time.
In an every day way, you practice the passion to be preached in your exploration of the world, in likes and dislikes that may last longer than any relationship you could have. For instance, I grew up in the film industry (more on this later). It’s a huge part of my life and my personality and most of my past. I don’t really know much else and for me, that ritual is a labor of love. I value tradition and I secretly find a lot of passion in the field (shh, don’t tell anyone) which is probably why I will succumb to it’s magic at some point. I’ve always loved the smell of books which evolved into reading which somehow further grew into a Canadian literature major. My favorite poet is Leonard Cohen which is why I started writing in the first place which seemed just as natural and important as eating or breathing. These are all things about me and about my life that I couldn’t ever have anticipated and yet I hold them closer to me than anything else. I confess them here. I would confess them to anyone in person. It is love in action to find the things you are passionate about and not just people. What a waste a life would be if spent entirely chasing other people.
In short, this year I might be thinking of Valentine’s day a little differently than I have in the past. No more packed, sweaty clubs where I’d kiss a strange boy at some point in the night to feel important. Maybe I’ll bake a cake or spend the night skype calling my friends at home. I’m not sure. But I am so grateful for Valentine’s day and its cheap reminders of all the things in my life that radiate love and persistence and for making me question it all. For the first time in my life, I don’t feel like resisting my truths. I still hold some crazy ideas about love, don’t get me wrong. I want to travel the world with someone and come home together, a little tired, a little sunburned and a lot in need of a shower but from the best trip of our lives. I want to challenge someone and be challenged like level 25 on tetris, challenged. Challenged because they know I can handle it and then some. I want to be opened up in a way that needs four hands instead of just two. I want time and trust and kindness to help me build something I can be proud of in my professional life and my personal life. I want to be with someone who creates and who inspires me to create and create and create because there’s never an ending to art. It is a way of life. It is life. I want to find ways to say I love you that are more about sharing and talking and being supportive and small and soft than they are about always having to knock it out of the stadium. It’s never easy. It gets hard sometimes and it gets raw but if I’m lucky (and a little of all the headstrong, hearty person I am), one day I will meet someone who isn’t afraid of getting knocked around a little bit.
After all, life is about falling in love with yourself. It’s about pursuing your passions, it’s about constantly willing to tinker things. It’s a challenge to open yourself to you and to the people around you. It’s not always liking yourself but resolving to love yourself no matter what. As I learn more of this world, I can’t wait to unfold with it and to experience as much of it as I can and to applaud the parts of that come out with every new discovery. It’s a life-long confession. I aim to stay inspired, to inspire. I will. I am already. And one day maybe, I’ll meet my person. Hopefully he’ll be someone who offers me his hand in the middle of the kitchen, with the kettle nearly whistling and loads of writing deadlines approaching, to slow dance with me (crucial it be in our socks) to some Frank Sinatra song from my childhood.
Until then, I’m going to enjoy every moment of this journey from broke university student to grown woman. Incredible things take time and apparently plan on acquiring a plethora of black turtlenecks at some point in the future and an Englishman that does … something. Whatever. Details are never needed. Besides, he’s not the important one here, I am.
Love,
Zandria