Valentine's Day originated as a Christian feast day honoring a martyr named Valentine. There's a lot more historical information I don't care to go into but you can google it if you do want to educate yourself more. Bottom line is that these days, Valentine's Day involves hearts, flowers, and most of all....love.
It's been about ten or so years since I posted my favorite reading for this day. I cut it out of the newspaper one day as it spoke to me. It was written by a wise woman named Judy Elliott, just to give her the credit she certainly deserves. It was titled "More Than Hearts and Flowers" and reads like this:
"The 14th of February fell a week to the day after I married. I rushed home from my teaching job, threw a clean cloth on a card table, tied red streamers on my new husband's chair and popped up an 8 x 10 Valentine by his plate. Then I waited for him to burst through the door, a bouquet of red roses in his arms. I threw together a heart-shaped chocolate cake from a mix and squirted red icing on the top. Newly-wed dessert with high expectations.
Finally, my groom showed up, a little late, but worth the wait I told myself. He took one look at the table and blanched white. He had forgotten it was Valentine's Day. No card. No flowers. No candy. I was crushed. He tried making polite conversation but I wasn't having any part of it. I dished up his dinner like it was prison food, plopped down in my folding chair and answered his "What's wrong?" question with all the maturity of a 22 year old bride. "Nothing," I sniffled. "Absolutely nothing." I pouted for three days, played the martyr and made both of us miserable..........
.....Seven years went by before, walking a sick baby in the night, I realized it was Cupid's day and I had forgotten to get him a valentine. It was his chance to whine, but he didn't. By then we were way past a candlelight dinner...I was scrubbing Gerber's oatmeal off the kitchen floor and he was taking his turn folding diapers. If he had brought flowers home, I would have had a sinking spell, knowing we needed the money to pay the pediatrician.......
....The same fella who forgot to remember me with a card on our first Valentine's Day together turned out to be a man who saw me through my mother's final illness and never left my side at her funeral. He rocked babies with earaches and drove carpools to Brownie meetings. All told, he probably spent four years of his life sitting on bleachers, watching swim meets and tennis matches. And when I had an operation, he stretched out on the uncomfortable chair by my bed and stayed at the hospital.
He'll never surprise me with a diamond ring in a box of Cracker Jacks...and he's yet to mention I can no longer fit into a size 8 dress. I'm a slow learner, but I finally realized it takes more than chocolate, valentines or roses to take care of the heart."
I REALLY relate to this so much. My 44 year Valentine has blessed my life and made my world happy.
I pondered hearts and flowers this morning when I awoke. I thought, "If one could smell hearts, they would surely have the sweet smell of flowers." I thought of what hearts represent in their sweetness. It's a common thing now to send a text and put a heart at the end. One can choose their own colors but for the most part, I choose the red. That receiver of the text knows that I care. There have been times I have sent a heart as the only thing on the text and they STILL know. The Grandbaby LOVES to draw hearts on everything as she states her "I love you" with those hearts. My "heart" pitter patters all over the floor as I receive many of those written joys.
The flowery "smell" of a heart can mean...
love for that person
caring for someone
a feeling of comfort to the receiver in times of sadness or uncertainty or pain
a knowledge to the receiver that they are so loved
and SO SO much more.
And that just is just a sampling of the flowery "smell" of a heart. It all comes down to senses. Smell is something you can't see. Smells can be good. Smells can be not so good. The feeling of emotion is not something you can see either. I know for myself, and I'm betting for you too, it doesn't take much to bring to mind a time when your "heart" hurt so badly and something or someone came along and gave such comfort and peace to that troubled emotion of the heart.
You blog readers know, too, that my greatest love just right right above my family is my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. HIS love is the greatest love of all. And HIS comfort to my sometimes aching heart offers the grace and mercy I don't deserve but get anyway and the peace I seek for my troubled heart.
So take some time today to "smell the hearts". I tend to say physical hearts and flowers are very over-rated but the hearts and flowers you FEEL inside are the best!
"And walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us, and hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling savor." Ephesians 5:2"
Happy Hearts' Day!
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