I’ve always hated Valentine’s Day. It’s artificial, manipulative and commercial. It’s a “holiday” that’s manufactured by the makers of cards and candy and other gifts. It’s meaningless. Really.
Except when it’s not meaningless. Maybe when you wish you had a chance to say — in a sincere way — what the mushy cards and saccharine sentiment of the day says. Do I actually hate it? Or do I miss the chance to say these things to someone who feels the same in return?
In many ways, love is a conflict between the head and the heart, especially when it’s not clear what the right direction is. I’ve faced this conflict many times. If I didn’t know that other people experience it, too, I would feel crazy because of the ways in which these conflicts pull me in different directions.
One thing can seem to make so much logical, pragmatic sense, but leave me feeling cold. That’s the head talking. Another thing can seem to be as necessary as air and water just to continue living. That’s the heart talking.
For me, fear has been the thing that’s spoiled everything — fear that I might marry the wrong person, fear that something I see inside of someone might be dangerous long term, fear that I might disappoint someone. And on and on. So many fears. So much regret.

We’re happier if we learn to ‘sell’ ourselves to people who want us
Whose life is it anyway? Police taser man trying to protect home from fire
If the state didn’t wither away for Marx and Engels, is there really a post-statist era ahead now?
If you’ll quit worshiping celebrities, their antics will quit shocking you
Why do we create families? It’s a ‘matter of the heart,’ not head
Is Obama playing politics with war on terror? Of course, just as Bush did
Freedom matters more than safety, even if you can’t see that
The Alien Observer: