Today's rant--er, thoughtful discourse, is on romance.
I'm not what you'd call a touchy-feely type. Once, when it was announced that a guy, who'd been working with us for about a year, was leaving town, I blurted out, "Who's gonna do his work?"
This was met with an open-mouthed stare. "Wow, L.A., that's cold! Not 'Gee, I'm gonna miss him.' Not 'He's been a great person to know.'"
*blink* "Um, yeah, all that."
I am one of those cold, heartless people that, by default, think more about task than people. Sue me.
This makes me productive. This makes me practical. This makes me Cruella Deville.
Whatever. I barely knew the guy. He wasn't dead; he was just leaving town. Eventually, they were going to get around to the work, I just got there a little faster.
So, it should come as no surprise to you that I don't put much stock in romance. Yeah, I like chocolates, picnics in the park, snuggling next to a fire, candlelight dinners. And I am most fortunate to have someone wonderful with which to enjoy these things. I like all the trappings of romance, I just don't buy into romance as a concept. Here's why...
I think romance is a made up thing. Made up by a confluence of marketers: Hollywood, Disney, Hallmark, FTD, all telling us we should have romance in our lives and what their particular definition is. Feeding us story lines that tell us we are somehow less if we don't have these things as defined by the official arbiters of romance.
Don't even get me started on the flower delivery competition at work on Valentine's Day. You're going to see your honey at home tonight, right? So, the whole purpose of getting flowers at work, on the one day of the year when the price is jacked up 300% and the quality is guaranteed to be horrendous, is to rub other people's faces in your happiness, right? Yeah, that's romance.
And it isn't enough that the prince dances with Cinderella. He has to carry her stinkin' shoe around and annoy everybody in town. All Cindy has to do is say "Woo, hoo, Princey, I'm over here." But does she bring herself to do it? No. She's too busy waiting to be
rescued from her life of misery.
How about a little personal responsibility, Cindy?
How about being the captain of your own flippin' destiny?
How about going back to the castle and giving that big door a knock?
How about not falling in love with the first guy that dances with you?
How about getting out from a life of drudgery without being aided and abetted by a prince?
How about developing your own self so that you begin to enjoy your own company and find that lots of princes start to see you as a catch?
How about appreciating the fine qualities of life/others without putting Disney-specific expectations on it?
I know, just call me Cruella. Tomorrow's topic: Why I hate puppies.