The day love turned into a card
HistorySo where did the whole idea of “celebrating love” with messages and hearts everywhere even come from?
The story of this date is like a patchwork blanket made from reused scraps: it’s a bit of everything stitched together. Back in Ancient Rome, they weren’t doing the same heart-eyes routine we do today. They were way more over-the-top and celebrated Lupercalia in mid-February. A pretty wild party about fertility and purification. Think drums and rituals, nothing to do with the calm, mandatory “surprise rose” waiting for you when you get home.
So what’s the origin of Valentine’s Day?
As centuries went by, the Roman Lupercalia got toned down. Christianity slipped Saint Valentine into the mix to cover up the old rites, but the full glow-up happened in the Middle Ages. That’s when poets like Geoffrey Chaucer started saying that around mid-February, the birds got together to find a little sweetheart. Suddenly, it became fashionable for nobles to write each other letters and promises with maximum drama.
Then in the 18th and 19th centuries, with printing presses sparking like crazy, paper cards became the thing and everyone started saying sweet stuff with melodramatic rhymes. In the end, what began as a Roman rite of pure survival turned into a “I’ll tell you in pretty handwriting and extra honey” tradition.
Magikito moral: love has spent centuries wearing different costumes. You stick with what actually works in the forest: say it every day, prove it now, and don’t wait for the calendar to give you permission to hand out affection.
