Today, lazy lovers argue that romance is dead, a mere fake ploy to seduce and an act that holds no weight in the world of love.
I’ve got self-induced whiplash from shaking my head no.
Thinking like this is simply a poor excuse to drop the ball.
My earliest memory of romance was my grandfather reaching his farm-weathered hand across the table to grab my grandmother’s Irish freckled one in the middle of dinner. Their eyes met in a secret knowing as I watched him rub his thumb across the back of her hand.
While she would roll her eyes and feign complaints about her husband, theirs was a special bond soldered in history and time. They taught me everything I know of true romance.
To the naysayers, I say this: Romance is only dead if you’re lazy. It eludes those who spend their evenings trolling Facebook for the next prettiest face, sending flirty messages to those who might be and others who have already been, and it escapes those who seek empty promises of easy fantasy versus the fertile potential of reality.
Romance turns a blind eye towards the weak ones who can’t summon the effort to please, to gesture, or to take the time to seduce. Romance decided to skip an entire generation of those who would rather watch porn solo on a flickering screen than actually make the effort to slowly drag a single finger across a strap exposing the warm skin of a bare shoulder while holding eye contact with a real someone.
You see romance doesn’t consist of grand gestures; it exists in the smallest of efforts. Picking a single flower and handing it to the one you love, a short call in the middle of the day, a kiss out of the blue and outside the bedroom, thinking ahead to make a plan, spending time uninterrupted by the world simply connecting, inquiring and listening, and the list goes on.
Now I watch men who would rather have a bike between their legs than make the effort to seduce a woman, women who would rather sit home watching romantic comedies than getting dressed and actually putting themselves out there, and people in relationships emotionally cheating on one another through social media.
While it’s, of course, healthy for couples to have their own interests and friendships, have these activities become fillers replacing true connection between couples, romance, and intimacy? Has the pursuit of success become so important that it eclipses all need for the slower aspects of life like romantic gestures and romantic interludes?
Romance for my grandparents wasn’t the expensive gestures we see in the movies, it was his cutting roses from the garden and bringing them inside to her, it was her baking his favorite pie, their Saturday night dance dates at the club, and his teasing her until she giggled. Each time he reached across the car seat or the table to grab her hand, I knew I was witnessing true romance.
It’s not that romance is dead, but we’re sure as hell trying to strangle the life out of it.
If we took the energy we spend swiping left and right and instead remembered the power of sending a song, simply calling to hear a voice, walking under the night sky holding a hand, leaving a note, whispering a wish, or simply giving a flower, the reward of romance would grace our days and ease us into warm embracing nights.
Lazy lovers call romance fake and manipulative, but I say don’t listen to those empty souls. Those cries of romance not being necessary or being outdated are merely the sad sounds of those who have given up unwilling to make any effort towards love, or to stand in their own vulnerability with their heart in their hands taking a chance on the one thing we say we all want, but so often refuse to seek- real love.
Romance isn’t dead, it’s simply covered up by short-term gratification muffled by men who are lazy and women who’ve grown bitter. We’re all so tired of being disappointed, yet somewhere under layers of disposable relationships filled with who’s next versus who matters, there lies the faint beating of the heart of romance.
Here’s where it’s not:
It’s not in a text, it’s not in a dating app, and it’s not even in a late night hook up.
Romance lies in effort. The effort to reach out, to extend, to make a grand gesture that is actually found in the smallest of acts, and it’s premeditated. Romance requires premeditated effort. Thinking ahead of another, dreaming and scheming of a future encounter that might actually lead to something. That’s what makes it romantic- it’s an effort by one human being to reach out and affect another. And there my friend, lays the problem. It seems none of us are willing to make that effort anymore.
Romance is only as dead as we believe it to be.
post via Tamara Star adapted from Daily Transformations
photo via Nick Fewings UpSplash.
***
RSVP for Love Sex Etc. Calls
Join the Sex, Love Etc. FACEBOOK GROUP here.
***
What’s Next? Talk with others. Take action.
We are proud of our SOCIAL INTEREST GROUPS—WEEKLY PHONE CALLS to discuss, gain insights, build communities— and help solve some of the most difficult challenges the world has today. Calls are for Members Only (although you can join the first call for free). Not yet a member of The Good Men Project? Join now!
Join The Good Men Project Community
All levels get to view The Good Men Project site AD-FREE. The $50 Platinum Level is an ALL-ACCESS PASS—join as many groups and classes as you want for the entire year. The $25 Gold Level gives you access to any ONE Social Interest Group and ONE Class–and other benefits listed below the form. Or…for $12, join as a Bronze Member and support our mission, and have a great ad-free viewing experience.
Register New Account
ANNUAL PLATINUM membership ($50 per year) includes:
1. AN ALL ACCESS PASS — Join ANY and ALL of our weekly calls, Social Interest Groups, classes, workshops and private Facebook groups. We have at least one group phone call or online class every day of the week.
2. See the website with no ads when logged in!
3. MEMBER commenting badge.
***
ANNUAL GOLD membership ($25 per year) includes all the benefits above — but only ONE Weekly Social Interest Group and ONE class.
***
ANNUAL BRONZE membership ($12 per year) is great if you are not ready to join the full conversation but want to support our mission anyway. You’ll still get a BRONZE commenting badge, and you can pop into any of our weekly Friday Calls with the Publisher when you have time. This is for people who believe—like we do—that this conversation about men and changing roles and goodness in the 21st century is one of the most important conversations you can have today.