Valentine’s is for everyone
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Lolita Harper
OK, so you’re not made of money. But that shouldn’t stop you from
planning an elaborate and romantic day o’ love for you and your
honey.
Living in a coastal community where, thankfully, the weather is
gorgeous, the beaches are a hop, skip and a jump away and the sunsets
are breathtaking, you have plenty of free -- yet quixotic --
activities at your disposal.
The thing to remember when doing Valentine’s Day on a budget is
that it is truly the thought that counts. So what you lack in cold
hard cash, you can make up for in warm, loving attention to detail.
Lee Mallory, a creative writing teacher at Santa Ana College and a
resident of Newport Beach, said poetry can be the perfect gift and it
won’t cost you a dime.
“Poetry is sensual and provocative,” Mallory said. “It means more
than a material thing because it comes from the heart and that is
always more valuable than something store bought.”
Mallory knows that many people are not comfortable with writing
and reciting poetry but he challenges people to shed the preconceived
notions of rhyming stanzas with “moon, June, bloom,” and create from
the heart. A beginning poet wants to bypass the generic greeting card
composition and express honesty and depth of feeling.
“It’s not brain-storming, it’s heart-storming,” he said.
Try to avoid hackneyed phrases or forced, sing-song rhymes, he
said. Be true to what you feel and let the word bubble up from your
heart, Mallory said. It is like writing a love letter -- just let it
flow.
“Poetry may be a low-budget gift but it, at best, records the high
moments in any relationship,” Mallory said. “After all, love becomes
immortal when it is written down -- that is, it is caught in time and
never dies.”
In addition to wooing your darling with your poetry prowess, one
can also take a more traditional -- and less thought-provoking --
path to romance by littering the bed, pillows or bathtub with rose
petals.
Vettina Miller, a florist and owner of Every Bloomin’ Thing, said
that she and many other florists take the “guard petals” off the
outside of their roses so that they bloom more beautifully. Miller
said she often gives them away or sells them for a small fee.
“They are a nice little touch, especially in the bathtub,” Miller
said.
Be sure to go easy on the petals though, and remember that the
longer they are left to wilt, the harder it’s going to be to pick the
decomposed pieces off the carpet, bed or sheets.
Happy Valentine’s Day!
* LOLITA HARPER is the community forum editor. She also writes
columns Wednesdays and Fridays. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275
or by e-mail at [email protected].
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