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The Big Fat Deflated Balloon of Valentine’s Bliss

By Erin Ann McBride and Juli Hiatt Caldwell, Messengers of Love, Hoarders of Chocolate

It is three days till Valentine's Day.  Men, that means it is on Monday.  Start ordering the flowers now.  Convinced you will or won’t get something this year?  Read on!

I blame Sarah.  It’s her fault that I fell in love in the first place.

There I sat in choir, acting the part of the self-important high school senior, when the Valentines’ deliveries began.  As a fundraiser, our school had sold balloons and flowers the week before the holiday.  We could send messages of love or friendship, and the sellers were in the process of delivering all the items.  I kept looking at the instructor and singing, unlike many other girls who looked with feverish intensity at the door, hoping each time it swung open the next delivery would be for her. 

We were in the middle of preparing for the spring choral competitions, and I thought the director was going to rip her hair out when the door swung open for the 89th time that hour. I was just singing my part when the delivery girl stopped in front of me and handed me a red and white balloon.  Initially I thought she was trying to reach someone behind me, so I scooted aside like the nice person I am.  But she wouldn’t move! She very persistently kept telling me that the balloon was for me.

I’m sure the look of shock on my face amused the class, because they actually burst into laughter when I insisted it couldn’t be mine.  The delivery girl left to complete her mission of love while I read the note:  “From your secret admirer.”

How unfair!  How cruel is it to give someone you love a present on the day girls fantasize about getting presents but not sign your name? Talk about a supreme act of cowardice. 

Love Always Wins

Still, my hopelessly romantic heart eventually beat up my inner pessimist, and I spent the last part of class ignoring the fact that my arm had fallen asleep from holding that balloon up and to the side, so the students behind me could see the instructor, but who are we kidding? It was Valentine’s Day, we were getting presents, and no one was listening anyway.

I must have read that card a hundred times during the last two classes of the day.  Who admired me?  Who liked me enough to send me a card?  I was a rather shy girl who gave the term ‘late bloomer’ an entirely new meaning.  I don’t think I hit my full stride until my early 20’s, and I was just awkward and clueless enough to make guys look past me to the cute girl right behind me and ask her out.  I had only been on one date up to that point, and I couldn’t imagine that the guy had enjoyed it enough to send me a Valentine’s balloon two years later!

My overactive imagination stampeded away with me, as it usually does, and I talked about that ridiculous balloon for weeks.  My questions, analysis, and hyper speculation lasted munch longer than the actual balloon, which fell prey to my frisky cat’s claws.  I talked about it so much, in fact, that one of my friends told me she would tell me who did it if I would just stop talking about it!  I nervously agreed, thinking that I would find my one true love with her words of revelation.

It was Sarah.  A friend had sent me that balloon to make me feel good after I had walked past the table where they sold the goods, grumbling in disgust that it was all a waste of money.  She not only sent me a balloon, she gave me hope and made me believe in a holiday that I had never believed in before.  It was all her fault!

Fast Forward a Few Years in the Future

It was my freshman year of college.  I still wasn’t the type of girl who dated much.  I was still a wallflower, but starting to bloom.   I had met a nice returned missionary and we were engaged to be engaged.  I’m still not sure what that means, but back then it meant one thing – I was finally going to get something on Valentine’s Day.

I had taken a part-time job to supplement my income that semester.  I needed more money to spend on the man I thought I loved.  A job was offered to me with the campus florist, and I gladly accepted.  How romantic, I thought!  I will be able to pick my wedding bouquets and get paid for it! 

The florist’s shop was a complete and total madhouse on Valentine’s Day.  I was filling orders and running around with the other twenty employees, smiling and hoping that the order waiting for us at home would be bigger and better than the one we were filling.  And of course, with each beautiful order of roses I filled, I quickly checked to see if my almost fiancé had placed it just for me. 

After six hours on my feet my back and feet were killing me.  But worst of all, I was developing allergies.  All the flowers were creating an allergic reaction in me never before witnessed by mankind.  Every additional flower I touched made my eyes swell that much more.  I couldn’t breathe through my nose.  I was beginning to really hate roses. 

Finally, the end of the day came.  One of the last orders I filled was the one of six roses and a teddy bear to be delivered to my almost fiancé.  I was so proud of it.  I thought for sure he would love it.  Granted, I hated roses at this point, but it was the thought that counts.  He would love it.

Wiping my runny nose I walked up the hill and back to my humble little dorm room.  I stumbled with my aching head into my room and checked my messages.  It was after 8 p.m. and the love of my life (at least I thought so back then) had still not called to profess his undying love for me.  I was a little ticked.  I had cuts from thorns all over my hands thanks to the hundreds of men who had thought to profess their love to other women.  Where were my well earned tokens of affection?  Too tired to think much longer, I collapsed in my bed.  Minutes later my phone rang, and I thought for sure it would be him.  Instead it was the front desk calling to say a package had been delivered for me.

Now, who are we kidding?  It was Valentine’s Day and I was engaged to be engaged.  I was expecting something good.  And by good I mean small, 1 carat, sparkly, with a gold band.  I don’t know that I expected him to drop that off at the front desk for me, but I was expecting something that rhymed with rhymin’ on this day of all Valentine’s Days. 

In spite of the overwhelming sinus pressure and the eyes so swollen I could barely see, I quickly jumped from bed and got dressed and presentable.  I rushed down to the front desk, convinced that eternity was about to begin.  Breathlessly, I asked for my package.  The woman behind the counter handed me a small teddy bear holding six roses, just like the gift I had gotten for my beloved, with the receipt still attached.  For a brief moment I thought it was fate – we had picked the same gift for each other.  Until I looked at the receipt and saw my own handwriting.  They had delivered it to me instead of him.  The big happy look on my face deflated and I handed it back to the lady at the counter.  I asked her to check again, there had to be something for me.  But no, there was nothing.

I went back up to my room, begged a friend for some Sudafed, and lay down in bed, phone close at my side.  The man of my love would call any minute.  I was sure of it.  Whatever he was planning, it was going to be good.  After all, it was getting late.  It must mean it was going to be candlelit! 

The allergy medicine kicked in quickly, and I was dead asleep.  About an hour later the phone rang.  I sprang to life.  It was the front desk again!  My heart leaped!  My roommate had a package.  My heart deflated again.  My roommate was also out of town with her boyfriend for a few days.  I went downstairs and collected the dozen red Columbian roses in a crystal vase waiting for her.  Carrying them back up to my room, I sneezed the entire way. 

Within minutes I was asleep again, phone by my side.  Moments later it rang again.  I repeated the scene, springing to life, answering the phone, etc.  Right up to the part where the front desk says my roommate has a package.  So again, I went down and collected another dozen red roses.  I couldn’t help myself this time.  I checked the card to see who was sending her flowers.  It wasn’t her boyfriend.  It was a guy she hardly knew.  How insensitive of him!  Didn’t he know that he was torturing me?

Again, fell back asleep.  This time for several hours.  After eleven p.m. some girls from my floor came to see if I was officially engaged yet.  (See, it wasn’t just me!  Everyone assumed he would propose!)  When they saw two dozen roses in my room they got very excited.  And then properly deflated when I said they were not for me.  I started sneezing again, and asked friends to please baby-sit the roses until my roommate returned.  No one turned me down.

Upset at being awake at eleven p.m. on Valentine’s Day and still not engaged, I decided to finally give in and call the man of the hour.  But not to find out what had happened to my diamond.  I was sure he must have been hit by a truck, fallen in a well, or worse.  What else could possibly keep him from seeing me on Valentine’s Day?!

After three heart-stopping rings (oh no! he really was hit by a truck!), he finally answered.  I let out a sigh of relief.  And then he did the quite unexpected.  He thanked me for my gift.  He had received it while stuck under the out of control truck?  I was so confused!  He then proceeded to explain that he had got back to his room late and didn’t want to wake me.  We had been attached at the hip, memorized each other’s every move, and spent hours each night on the phone, and suddenly on the day of love and arrows, he didn’t want to wake me?  It wasn’t even midnight yet!

He then said, Hey, since you aren’t asleep, let’s meet in the lobby for a minute.”  My heart leapt again, and I raced down to meet him.  I wasn’t really expecting a ring.  At least, I was hoping he wouldn’t propose to me in the lobby of my dorm.  But I ran as fast as I could anyway. 

He was wearing a raggedy old t-shirt and jeans, and looked totally disheveled.  And in his hands he was holding a small plastic container.  The kind of plastic container that you get at the salad bar if you get one of the small salads.  Definitely not the kind of container you put a shiny engagement ring in.

He told me he loved me, asked why my eyes were so swollen, wished me a happy Valentine’s Day, blah blah blah, and handed me the plastic container.  Inside was a heart-shaped sugar cookie with our names on it.  And it was cracked.  I looked at the cookie and then looked at him hopefully.  This had to be the first gift, right?  There was more to come?  He wasn’t really giving me a broken sugar cookie with smeared frosting, was he??

He smiled and reached behind the couch.  I closed my eyes convinced still that eternity would begin in just a few breathless moments.  He said “open them!”  And I quickly obeyed.  And there it was…A great big, slightly deflated, lopsided, Valentines Day balloon. 

So Where Are We Now?

We are a little bit smarter, a little bit wiser, and a little bit thicker in the mid-section. We still watch the delivery girl hopefully waiting to see if she has anything special in her basket for us.  We now appreciate the cards from girlfriends and mothers.  But still open the cards hoping they will be from the man of our dreams professing his never-ending love.

The bottom line here is that it’s wonderful to get gifts on Valentine’s Day, but don’t be disappointed if you don‘t get a lavish gift from that someone special.  Don’t be surprised if you don’t get an engagement ring.  When we get right down to it, Valentine’s is a silly holiday to being with.  We prefer to call it Singles Awareness Day.

Why do we need a holiday to dictate where and how we should show love? I don’t think we do.  We can show it all the time, and we should. 

Maybe you’re one of the lucky girls or guys who has someone to spoil this Valentine’s Day.  Enjoy the day, but just remember that it’s like Christmas – we need to give presents of love all the time.  We need to keep that spirit of love with us all the time!  If we depend on one over-hyped, over-marketed day to inspire us to give the love we should already be giving, we have a big problem. 

And if you don’t get what you expected this Valentine’s Day, no worries!  The chocolate is on 50% markdown the next day.  That’s where Juli and Erin plan to be the day after, racing down the aisles with fully laden carts ala ‘SuperMarket Sweep!’

Got a great big deflated Valentines story to share with us?  Come join in the fun and send in your unbelievable stories!  Send us your best or worst story about the holiday that should also be known as Excessive Chocolate Consumption Day or Singles Awareness Day. As always, all comments, compliments, cupids, Cadillacs, cookies, candy, and more can be sent to us at erinandjuli@meridianmagazine.com!

(To the men attempting to win the hearts of these two authors on February 14, we will make it easy for you- roses [your choice of color], foot rubs, dark chocolate, steak, and a romantic comedy should do the trick. You’ve been reminded twice!) 

 

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About the Authors:

With "Sex and the City" and "Friends" dominating our culture, LDS Singles have few places to turn for wholesome entertainment geared towards them. This column aims to fill that void. Authors Juli Hiatt Caldwell and Erin Ann McBride share a combined total of 19 years of dating and 13 years in singles wards. Between them they count over 15 ex-boyfriends, 8 singles wards, and at least 5 email addresses. Friends for seven years, they share many of their personal experiences in this format. As they like to remind each other, “All stories depicted herein are mostly true and will resemble characters living and deceased. Some names and facts have been changed to protect the innocent, make the reader laugh, and in some cases preserve the dignity of the authors. Although the authors are pretty sure they surrendered their dignity long ago.”

Julianne Hiatt Caldwell was born in Anaheim, California, the fourth of seven kids in a very rowdy, loud family. They moved to Utah, where she completed school and started her college education before moving to the Washington, D.C. area, where she worked as a nanny for three years. She met her husband Bryan on a trip to Utah to visit her family, and they were married six months later in the Bountiful Temple. They have been married six years. Juli and Brian are the proud parents of the two most adorable little girls on the planet, Caliana, 4, and Deandra, 1. Cali and Andi are the proud mommies of a host of baby dolls and family pets, including three fantail goldfish they have named Marlin, Dory, and Nemo. Juli and her family are members of the Palm Bay 2nd ward in Florida. She also recently completed her first 5K race and looks forward to running more. Juli is an avid reader, singer, and musician. She also enjoys freelance writing and will soon complete her college degree online from Weber State University.

Erin Ann McBride is a native of the Washington, DC area. She is an events and party manager, currently putting her talents to work as a gun show planner for Beretta USA. She also runs her own business, Events By Erin, on the side. When she is not busy planning dates, parties, and weddings for her friends, she can be found volunteering at the local fire department where she is a certified fire fighter and EMT-B. Erin Ann loves to travel and visit third world countries. It is her dream to someday live and write full-time about life in less fortunate countries. Erin Ann graduated from George Mason University and holds a B.A. in Political Communication and Broadcast Journalism. She also enjoys romantic dinners, moonlight walks on the beach, chick flicks, roller coasters, professional sporting events, and does not currently have a boyfriend. Erin Ann is currently a member of the Langley YSA Ward, McLean, VA Stake, where she enjoys planning weekly activities for her friends while serving as a Family Home Evening Group Leader.

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