As do those who gripe and complain that on this one day a year--they have noone to love them.
It is a concept I don't understand. I suppose if they were an orphan with no contact with society it may be true.

As do those who gripe and complain that on this one day a year--they have noone to love them.
It is a concept I don't understand. I suppose if they were an orphan with no contact with society it may be true.
Still, I understand how women married to men who are incapable of genuine warmth or who are generally thoughtless want, at the very least, a card, some flowers and candy one day a year. I don't think they are unreasonable.
Those offended with teh holiday tend to not have a boyfriend/girlfriend at a minimum and then whine and moan about how noone loves them. (O.M.G--my facebook eyes!!!!!)
Yet they have family, they have friends--who adore them. But the lack of someone to make out with and give them cheap candy and stuffed toys and a piece of paper with a heart on it....
It means that NO.ONE.LOVES.THEM. and thus the day sucks.
There is nothing bitter about recognizing how foolish some people behave.
Before I got married, my mother told me, "If there is something you want, be it a gift or an expectation that you have, unless you enjoy disappointment, you have to TELL your spouse. He's not a mind reader and if you don't speak up, you have no one to blame but yourself." It was some of the best advice she's ever given me. Now if you DO tell your spouse and he just ignores your wishes, then you need to rethink your relationship and decide if you really are okay with that kind of life.
Those offended with teh holiday tend to not have a boyfriend/girlfriend at a minimum and then whine and moan about how noone loves them. (O.M.G--my facebook eyes!!!!!)
Yet they have family, they have friends--who adore them. But the lack of someone to make out with and give them cheap candy and stuffed toys and a piece of paper with a heart on it....
It means that NO.ONE.LOVES.THEM. and thus the day sucks.
There is nothing bitter about recognizing how foolish some people behave.
He may not be a mind reader, but he is my husband and I do expect him to know my likes, dislikes and enough about me to make good choices when it comes to gift giving. I feel sorry for the women who feel they always have to tell their spouse what they want. Have I told him specific things I want throughout the years, of course. But most holidays I assume my husband is the one person I shouldn't have to tell what I want, he should know me better than anyone else.
I'm glad you got a lot out of the advice your mother gave you. But if ever feel like I need to say that to my daughter, then I think the better advice will be to tell her she shouldn't be marrying him, because her expectations are way too low. To say a woman has no one to blame but herself if their spouse doesn't know what to give them for a gift without her telling him, certainly isn't saying much about the spouse.
Well, I didn't expect much for Valentine's Day. DF and I generally don't celebrate it much. He's been talking about wanting a cheap mp3 player to take to work -- he just got his first post-college job, and I'm proud of him, so I got him a Zune. It was about $250 with a few accessories, and he loved it. He got me a Zune pass for my Zune.. $15/month, and I love it.I've been talking to him about it for MONTHS, because I want to download music for my Zune but didn't want to add another bill to our budget. Apparently he'd actually been listening
laughing
and wanted me to have it. I thought it was sweet.
I don't see what the big fuss is about Valentine's Day. If you want to celebrate it, that's fine. If you don't want to, that's fine. I just don't see why people need to make others feel bad about their decisions. Just because YOU (a general you) think it's a stupid Hallmark holiday doesn't mean I need to feel bad for celebrating it.
He may not be a mind reader, but he is my husband and I do expect him to know my likes, dislikes and enough about me to make good choices when it comes to gift giving. I feel sorry for the women who feel they always have to tell their spouse what they want. Have I told him specific things I want throughout the years, of course. But most holidays I assume my husband is the one person I shouldn't have to tell what I want, he should know me better than anyone else.
I'm glad you got a lot out of the advice your mother gave you. But if ever feel like I need to say that to my daughter, then I think the better advice will be to tell her she shouldn't be marrying him, because her expectations are way too low. To say a woman has no one to blame but herself if their spouse doesn't know what to give them for a gift without her telling him, certainly isn't saying much about the spouse.
You're free to disagree with me but there is no need to feel sorry for me. I'm not going to tell you about what a great husband I have because it's none of your business. Your whole post was pretty rude.
I disagree. I think her post was a lot less rude than all the other posts on here, especially the OP's.
^^ I agree with that.
Here's the problem with Valentine's Day (and really, any gift-giving holiday). First of all, people (and by 'people' I tend to mean 'women') equate the gift with the love behind it. And more importantly, men are bombarded with people and marketing telling them how awful it is to get your wife/gf/whatever a toaster, even if the toaster is what she wants. My coworkers drive me crazy in this regard. The poor guy who works in our office doesn't stand a chance of actually getting his gf what she actually wants.
The spa gift is supposed to scream romance. The treadmill that she actually wanted is supposedly completely unromantic and apparently tells your wife that she's fat.
As for Valentine's Day itself... yes, I hate it. That doesn't make me bitter. I truly don't understand how people can't see that it's a hard day to be single.
I really don't get why people care about what others feel and do on this day.
Dh and I never ever get to go out. My parents came up and offered to babysit so we could have a date on Valentine's Day. It was wonderful! Yes, it could have been any other day, but then I would not have got the rose given to me at the bookstore we went to. We didn't get each other gifts, just cards. I did buy Bananagrams when we were at the bookstore, because I'd been wanting it.
We then went out to dinner (I had the most delicious Reuben I've ever had and dh had a New York strip with smoked tomato butter) and then to the movies to see Leap Year.
I had a blast!
romance doesn't have to mean .. money. breakfast in bed, taking careof the baby while she sleeps in... .