Some months I was asked to write a guest post for someone's blog. As it has yet to be published I thought, perhaps I could share it on my own forum. It was fun to write, and not a little challenging, especially as the subject matter was left for me to choose.
Looking back over my own romantic life I can see perhaps the men in my life didn't grasp what I didn't have the words to tell them at the time; that romance doesn't need to be grand cinematic gestures, costly or extravagant.
“Tell me your definition of romance,”
my new friend asked. His question gave me a moment's pause before I
rattled off a reply that while sincere was still a little glib. Our
conversation eventually came to an end, but I couldn't shake that
question. I mentioned it to my boyfriend later that day when he
called. He immediately began to list what he thought of as
romantic, a list I am familiar with and one I agree with. And still
the question stayed in my head, as some things do. It seemed
apparent then that this needed further investigation.
If you Google the word “romance”
the first thing that comes up is a series of images of hearts and
flowers, of couples on sunset beaches. Nothing too surprising there.
Up next is a Wikipedia entry for
Romance (love) Romance
is
the expressive and pleasurable feeling from an emotional attraction
towards another person associated with love.
In
the context of romantic love relationships, romance usually implies
an expression of one's strong romantic love, or one's deep and strong
emotional desires to connect with another person intimately
or
romantically. Historically, the term "romance" originates
with the medieval ideal
of chivalry
as
set out in its chivalric romance literature.
This
is followed by the Free Dictionary definition:
a love affair; ardent emotional attachment or involvement between
people; or a strong, sometimes short-lived attachment, fascination or
enthusiasm for something.
Further
exploration of Wikipedia (honestly not the best source of
information, but these were the top results to my search) revealed
this explanation: Romance
or romantic
usually refers to romance (love) love emphasizing emotion over libido
Dictionary.com
(my favourite on-line dictionary/thesaurus) offered a more academic
definition:
a novel
or other prose narrative depicting heroic or marvelous deeds,
pageantry, romantic exploits,
etc., usually in a historical or imaginary setting.
These links were followed by a
link to the IMBd website's listing of top romantic movies. Most
were, no surprise, romantic comedies.
Society has told us that this is
what romance is. Hearts and flowers, fleeting emotions and literary
constructs. I think it is something a little more indefinable,
intangible and even just a little subjective.
I put the question out to my
friends on Facebook and discovered a common theme, one entirely
missed by online encyclopedias and dictionaries. The answers I
received aligned with what I had discussed with my boyfriend, and
with the poser of the initial question.
Not long after my boyfriend and I
started seeing each other he came to see me with an armful of books
he had just found at a used book sale. I accepted his gift, laughing
that it had been ages since anyone had brought me flowers, but no one
had ever brought me books. To me this was real romancing. I love
books, and he knew that. (Don't get me wrong, I still like getting
flowers! Yes, dear, that was a hint.)
Romance is a thousand little
things, unique to every relationship. The response I received to my
query were all from women in solid, lasting relationships, women who
have seen relationships fail too, so they appreciate the value of
these invisible gestures.
An
unexpected coffee. An impromptu foot rub. Kissing my forehead.
Helping me tie my shoes when I can't reach my feet.
Turning
the electric blanket on without telling so I don't crawl into a cold
bed. Washing the truck so me and my friends have a clean ride.
Pushing me to buy that certain something that I am on the fence
about. Holding hands while watching tv. Hugging me from behind when
I'm standing at the counter.
Making
coffee for me in the morning
Doing
the dishes
Choosing
to prefer me. My hubby always looks for a way to make my day; like
surprise me with a cup of coffee.
Harry
does the kitchen everyday so when I come upstairs it's so clean and
tidy, delights me each day, trimming my horses feet, build a whole
array of shelters for the livestock
Romance
is his pouring me a glass of wine while I start supper, it's knowing
how I like my coffee, and bringing it to me in the morning so I can
stay in bed a little longer. It's loving my daughter like she was
his own, and showing her how a real man treats a woman so she'll know
when she grows up. It's notes tucked into a lunchbox or left as
surprises around the house
And
the list goes on....
Private jokes, and shared
memories, mutual respect. This is romance. A thousand everyday
things, this is romance, the way we keep love alive, keep our
relationships strong and growing.
I have had two marriages fail.
There were lots of reasons they didn't work, and I won't delve into
that here, but I know that when things started getting tough these
were the first things to fall by the wayside. We stopped touching,
stopped serving each other, stopped trying to anticipate the other's
needs.
There is no formula for romance,
despite all the books that argue otherwise. It is knowing who you
have decided to love and choosing the best way to love them every
day.
Valentine:
You
are not red cardboard hearts adorned with ribbon
and
plastic flowers containing stickysweet candy
not
longstemmed redroses, crooned sonnets or sentimental verse written
for Hallmark.
You
are laundry trailing across the bedroom floor, dishes not carried to
the sink,
asking
"Are you busy?" when I am up to my elbows in dishwater or
cookie dough. You are heartsung laughter, mascara on pillowcases,
whispered secrets in our dark, fistfulls of windblown wildflowers.
I
cannot cease breathing, stop my pounding heart, I cannot keep the
wind, the sun from caressing, searing the prairie.
You
ask a knotted question: "why do you love me?"
Justbecause,
that's all, justbecause.
Valentine:
The
years have flown on wild wind and eagles' wings
my
heart rent, repaired, shattered and mended
You
have never been red cardboard hearts, candy, flowers, candlelight;
Stickysweet
sentimentality
You
are hands to hold in longdark nights
lovesong
in perfect harmony, arias of laughter and tears
you
are banished ghosts, unexpected joy
You
are lingering Sunday morning coffee, the sure routine of everyday,
counting stars Saturday midnight;
Moonsong,
autumn breezes, sunsets followed too soon by sun's rising
You
ask the unanswerable: "Why do you love me?"
I
cannot cease breathing, stop my pounding heart; I cannot keep the
wind, the sun from caressing, searing the prairie.
My
answer remains-
Justbecause
I do
I
do
justbecause.