Monday, February 13, 2017

VALENTINE'S DAY

VALENTINE’S DAY

Did you have a terrible Valentine’s Day? It’s not uncommon. This special day in the calendar can be especially hard, whether you’re single or in a relationship. It’s hard on the planet too!

Valentine’s Day is a holiday we all know too well. Our earliest memories go back to elementary school when the holiday was basically an excuse to gorge ourselves on chocolate kisses and scour the drugstore aisles for the coolest cards to give our friends. Confetti was thrown around without a care and arts and crafts revolved around making crooked paper hearts for our mothers that said things like “thank you for feeding me so I don’t die” and “you are the bestest mom.”
At the end of the day, Valentine’s was just free candy and a giant bag of cards to feed our ego. Now, the holiday mostly involves misinterpreted text messages and endless Pandora commercials. The truth is unless you’re the CEO of a greeting card company, a florist or a cheap motel owner, Valentine’s Day is the absolute worst—for us, and for the environment.

Love letters for landfills

First of all, the evolution of Valentine’s Day as a celebration of love has not exemplified ideals of social inclusion. According to the telegraph, the earliest ancestor of the holiday was an ancient roman festival called Lupercalia, a fertility ritual when men would spank young women with dog skin whips to make them fertile.
Once pagan rituals became passé, the holiday graduated from celebrating fertility to recognizing romantic love. In the mid-18thcentury, the passing of love-notes became the norm. As postal services became more affordable, anonymous letters became easier to deliver, each handmade with lace and paper, addressed to secret lovers and doting wives. Unfortunately, when Hallmark began mass producing cards in 1913, it became easier to send a pre-written message than one written from the heart. Sadly, the way it works today, Valentine’s has basically become a festival of consumer excess and packaging waste.
This Valentine’s Day alone, Americans are expected to spend more than $19 billion. Imagine the kind of good that money could do if it wasn’t spent on roses, chocolates and cards. Once the chocolates are eaten and the fancy jewelry is taken out of its case, their packaging goes straight into the garbage. Greeting cards too—most people glance at them once, scream with delight and then throw them in a dark drawer or waste bin.
Worst of all are roses—which, though innocent looking, bear a thorny secret. The 100 million roses grown just for Valentine’s Day produce nearly 9,000 metric tons of COemissions in a single year. On top of being flown in from warmer climes, roses are so delicate that they have to shipped around in temperature controlled trucks, all of which wastes precious energy and contributes to the emissions that speed climate change and slowly destroy natural habitats.

Relationships are made, not marketed

Unfortunately, Valentine’s Day also perpetuates unhealthy gender dynamics and distorts our understanding of love. Weeks of marketing reinforce traditional, heteronormative expectations for how men and women should express their romantic feelings (whether those feelings are present or not). Men are pressured to buy gifts for their partners lest they appear cheap. Women are expected to reward their man for taking them to dinner and buying them shiny baubles. Unfortunately, the focus on material exchange suggests that love can be bought or sold; that the more money you spend on someone, the more you love them. These expectations disempower women and exploit both sides of the relationship.
Sustainable, healthy relationships are built on completely different ideals. A person must be willing to love their partner unconditionally and be prepared to learn from their relationship and shared experiences. You cannot buy love, you have to nurture it. True love doesn’t need to be evidenced by a flashy display of wealth.  Simply put, if someone has to buy you a box of chocolates to prove their love is real—it’s not real.
That said. I would never say no to a box of fair trade, organic chocolates.

Saturday, February 4, 2017

Do You Really Love Your Car

Valentine’s Day. Filled with kisses, chocolates, and enough flowers to build your own Float – this is also the perfect day to proclaim your love for someone to the world…..

Yes, poems are a staple of the holiday, ranging from “lift-me-off-my-feet-with-your-way-of-words” to “do-they-give-participation-awards-for-these?”


While that secret crush of yours might be a bit daunting, proclaim your love to the one that constantly keeps you safe, secure, and stylish: your car? Here is my letter to the car I just bought:

Dear Car,
We just got together today and, well, I think it's a good time to let you in on something.
You see, when I hit your gas pedal and hear your engine roar defiantly, I get the biggest smile.
Flipping through radio stations, letting the bass notes of your premium audio system fill my ears…I gotta say, it creates this tingling in my chest. That tingling has been hidden away until I got you!
I was never one to believe in ‘love at first sight’ until I laid my eyes on you.
You were sitting perched in between your brothers and sisters on the lot. There was something about your shine, about the gleaming sun bouncing off your sleek grille that made my jaw drop and my mind think “that’s the one.”
Can’t you see what I’m trying to tell you?
I love you. I really love you.
I love the way you keep me wrapped in your arms with your intricate safety technologies. I love when we go on a drive. I love how you keep me warm and cozy on even the coldest mornings.
These things might not seem like a big deal to you, but to me, they matter. You mean the world to me my sweet, sweet car.
This probably seems silly but, I’m glad we met and I honestly can’t get by without you.
Here’s to another wonderful year of memories on the road!
Whatever you drive, your car loves you. This month, show some back!
Do you want to express the love you feel for your car? Shout it out to the world in the comments section below.