The day love turned into a card

History

So 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.

Heart-Shaped Toasties with Red Berries

Magical recipe

Today we felt like cooking a heart that’s sweet but not sickly: crunchy like a relationship, red like passion, juicy like feelings, and with that little “look how cheeky the world is, and how good this tastes” vibe. If you make it for someone, lovely. If you make it for you, even better.

Ingredients:

  • Sandwich bread or country loaf, sliced
  • Cream cheese or thick yogurt (a couple of generous spoonfuls)
  • A handful of strawberries
  • A handful of raspberries or blueberries
  • Honey or jam (one mischievous teaspoon)
  • A few mint leaves (optional, for that fancy little touch)

How to make it:

Toast the bread until it goes “crunch”, but don’t burn it or snap it, just like the heat we give a relationship that’s just starting. Then dig through your drawer for the knife that inspires you most and cut the toast into a heart shape. The leftovers do not get tossed. That’s the “love tax”, and you eat it.

Spread the cream cheese or yogurt like you’re laying a blanket of calm over a sensitive heart.

Slice the strawberries and place the red berries on top like a red crown. No perfect architecture here, just edible joy.

Finish with a thin drizzle of honey or a dab of jam. If it drips a bit too much, we’ll call it a happiness stain.

Forest tip: if your heart comes out a little wonky, it means it’s alive. We’ll leave symmetry for road signs.

The chemistry of love (no cheesy filters)

Science bite

Did you know...?

When we say “my heart is pounding”, the one throwing the street party is actually your brain. Love, affection, and that “I wanna be with you” feeling are not some magical meringue drumming in your chest, they’re a whole squad of chemicals taking turns in your head like a crew of duendes setting up the forest festival.

What does dopamine do?

Picture dopamine as an invisible sweet. It’s the chemical behind “this is awesome, I want more!”. When you see that person who gives you butterflies, your brain dumps a full bag of candy and goes: “Hey, this is something good, keep your eyes on it!”. It’s not that the other person has powers, it’s your reward system throwing a huge birthday bash.

What is oxytocin?

If dopamine is the candy, oxytocin is the soft glue, or a warm blanket. It shows up when you hug, when you trust someone, or when you’re chilling on the couch with your favorite humans. It doesn’t hypnotize you, but it makes your body feel like it’s in a safe hideout, no storms, no wolves nearby, and it helps you want to stay stuck there for a long time.

Why does love make you nervous?

That’s when the turbo button kicks in: adrenaline. It’s the same stuff that helps you run fast if a wasp is chasing you. It makes your pulse jump and your hands sweat because your body is gearing up for something important. It’s like your inner circuits put on hiking boots before you even decide to leave the house.

Magikitos translation: if today you’ve got butterflies in your belly, give them a nice toast so they chill out. Love is chemistry, sure, but what you choose to build with those Lego pieces is what truly makes the magic in the forest.

Why do we draw the heart “wrong”?

Curiosity

Have you noticed how the heart we doodle looks nothing like the real one, not even on a foggy day?

If you look at a cartoon heart and then at a real one (the one thumping inside you), you’ll see they’re as similar as chalk and cheese. Basically, not at all.

A proper, organic heart is more like a fist with tubes, but the red symbol everyone draws is way more sleek and cute.

The funny thing is that this drawing didn’t come from painters who studied medicine, it came from centuries of people scribbling and refining the vibe.

Where does the heart shape come from?

No one knows for sure, but there are a few theories lurking around that we absolutely love. One says that thousands of years ago people drew ivy leaves, the kind that twist around and hug forest trees, to show that two people were bound together. Another theory says it comes from an ancient plant called silphium, whose seeds had that exact shape, and it was used so much to talk about love that it basically became love’s official logo. Over time, artists rounded the corners until we got the heart we know today: ❤️.

Why does everyone draw the simplified heart?

Picture this. You want to tell someone you love them with a quick drawing in the sand or on the fogged-up window of their ride. If you had to draw a real heart with all its veins and ventricles, you’d be there forever. The little heart icon won because it’s easy to repeat: two curves, a point downwards, and boom, message delivered. It’s like a secret code everyone understands in one second without having to be some big-time artist.

In the forests of Taramundi, we know the important thing isn’t that the drawing is perfect, it’s that when someone gets it they go, “yep, that hit me right in the heart”. Sometimes the simplest thing is what leaves the deepest mark.

Cupid, but make it jam-allergic

Joke of the day

Today we spotted Cupid in the woods, hiding behind a pine tree, sharpening arrows like you sharpen a pencil right before an exam.

We went: “Yo Cupi, don’t you ever get tired of all that love-arrow action?” and he goes: “Nope, I’m in it for the lil drama that pops off when people fall out of love!”

And right at that moment, red-berry jam splashed onto his bow. Moral of the story: love might be legendary, but sometimes it leaves you all sticky.

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