I have horribly mixed feelings about Valentine’s Day. I grew up being told that it’s a very artificial holiday made up by companies that want to sell you something. That still makes sense to my head, but my heart strongly identifies with the things we associate with the day.
In a lot of ways, that head vs. heart struggle perfectly captures all of my lifelong struggles with loving and being loved.
Preview of new week’s show: It was about 16 years ago when I got an unexpected first-hand lesson in how motivation really works. I had wanted to make a film for something like 20 years, but I kept finding every excuse in the book not to overcome my fears. And then I met a woman who was impressed that I was going to make a film. I wanted her to love me — and I was shooting my film less than 90 days later.
Next week, we’re going to talk about how love can motivate us to do things we didn’t know we could do.

Need for love drives behaviors; for me, old needs make me eat
Need for certainty is an internal tyranny that leads to the wrong path
U.S. wasted $60 billion in war funds: Is anyone honestly surprised?
Surprise! Sane foreign policy experts agree with that crazy ol’ Ron Paul
When you can’t call one you love, silent phone just taunts your need
Regardless of political beliefs, why does anyone watch Bill O’Reilly?
Peace won’t come until you quit obeying long-gone programmers
Father who I saw as Mr. Morality turned out to be a liar and a thief
Not having someone to hope for differs from pain of missing love