I’m writing this ahead of Valentine’s Day, because normally at this point the fear and dread has set in. I’ve never been keen on being in a pink, heart-festooned restaurant even when I was in a couple, but it’s even worse when you’re not. At least this year, VD (oops, did I just write that?) has the good sense to be on a Sunday, so we can all avoid the flower deliveries to the office and the smug carriers of said flowers on the train home. Normally, I’d be contemplating a day inside my flat, binge-watching something, and binge-eating something else.
But this year, I’m not. It doesn’t actually matter any more. I used to get all het up about this stuff, but that moment has passed. I know VD is a mostly sham experience, but hey – lots of my friends are in love, or have found love, so it’s fine if they want to celebrate it. Hell, I’ll even celebrate it with them (in a social-media sense).
I have found real love here and there in my life, but never for very long. I think the most I’ve managed is a few months. I remember the feeling it creates… That heady delight in everything, where you want to skip down the road and hand out flowers to small children and the elderly. You find yourself marvelling at the minute detail of the world and being kind to people on the Tube. I remember feeling like I wanted to pirouette down the street (dance training comes in handy) and sing, “I’m in love … with a pretty wonderful boy!” from West Side Story.
The thing is, I’m feeling a bit like that right now. There’s no romance in my life, although I do see a couple of guys occasionally. They make me feel happy when I’m with them because there’s no pressure for it to be anything than what it is. I think I make them happy too. As a friend says to me quite often, “It is what it is, Babe.” This has turned out to be my life mantra.
It’s been coming on now for a few months. I have found a job that I love and people I love working with. I’m being collaboratively creative in a way that hasn’t happened for years and it is making me so happy.
I have found myself letting old grudges gently slide (well, nearly all of them). I’ve realised people are just humans like me, imperfect and just trying their best. Might as well just all get along while we’re here, eh? Why make it worse for ourselves?
I’ve found myself helping a variety of people on public transport and smiled at the surprise on their faces. I remember the last time I felt like this and it was a love affair that did it – it made me want to be kinder to people. How lovely that it can be done even without another person being involved. Who knew that all it required was just to feel genuinely happy in your own skin? I don’t think I’ve ever felt like this.
So here I am, nearly 49, single, feeling happy in my skin. And yes, I’m just as amazed as you probably are. It’s not supposed to happen, is it? Women my age are meant to be surrounding themselves with cats and growing hairy warts on their faces. Instead, I’m striding out to work with a spring in my step, booking solo adventures abroad and saying howdy doody to surprised old people in north-west London. I’ve even given up dieting and don’t feel the need to drown any sorrows in booze. I even spent Christmas in the UK, without feeling like I needed to get on a flight somewhere. Anywhere…
I’ve noticed for a while now that more people are smiling at me, in general. I think it’s because my face is set in one (for a while I thought I had a ‘little something’ on my cheek). I’ve particularly enjoyed exchanging smiles with women when I’m out and about, mainly because smiling at men can often get you in trouble. And I think women SHOULD smile at each other more. There’s way too much scowling for my liking.
So, if this post is making you gag with all its sickly sweetness, bear in mind that on Sunday, I might be celebrating the fact that you’ve found your own sickly sweet love. And I truly think that’s great because I’ve felt its awesomeness.
But I’m afraid the old cliché is a cliché for a reason: because it’s true.
In the words of Whitney Houston, learning to love yourself is the greatest love of all.
Happy Valentine’s Day to me, and to all you lovers out there.
Mwah.
And a great big GIANT MWAH right back at you misses xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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You are enjoying a ‘golden moment’. Good for you. Make the most of it.
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Mwah right back atcha! FWIW, M and I don’t do Valentines. We celebrate 9th February, which is our “Halfaversary”. Our plans for this year’s celebration were slightly trashed by M getting stuck at Cambridge Station for an hour on his way home, due to a signalling problem. We postponed plans to have pancakes for dessert and watch The Martian on DVD til Wednesday but he surprised me with a bunch of yellow roses (he knows they’re my favourite!) and I’d got him a nice sirloin steak for his tea (I know it’s his favourite!), so we still enjoyed our personal celebration of us. We were both really late starters when it came to dating and we didn’t meet til we were 33 and 32 respectively. We had both felt that we would never meet anyone so we still occasionally have to pinch ourselves, to make sure it’s real! xxxx
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I love that story x
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Love it! X
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Contentment is vastly under-rated in my opinion. And being comfortable in your own skin is so unachievable for some people that those of us who have managed to achieve it (with or without cats!) do have a certain amount of smugness. Welcome to the club my lovely 🙂
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Don’t give up all your grudges, they can make for so much fun. Just keep them on a gentle simmer to be sampled from time to time.
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