Some Valentine Day Suggestions

Some Valentine Day Suggestions
I interrupt my travelogue with a Valentine's Day post. Never one of my favorite holidays, possibly because it's also my birthday. You're supposed to feel in love on Valentine's Day, not older.

I find it interesting that arguably the most romantic movie of all-time is about a married woman who has an affair and is ready to dump her husband. The movie is CASABLANCA.

Guys always dread Valentine's Day because it comes with a huge heap of obligation. You have to buy her a present, you have to take her out to an expensive dinner. There's a lot of just "going-through-the-motions". And any true sentiment gets buried in a price fixed menu.

Might I make a suggestion?

"Another way to show genuine affection is to make her laugh. Is there something you can do to celebrate Valentine's Day that's fun"? Any place you can go that's a little off-beat and silly? Any way you could let your hair down and do something a bit crazy and out of character? Think of those great old romcoms - guys are always doing slightly embarrassing things to win the hearts of their Audrey Hepburns. Often they wind up fully dressed falling into pools or getting arrested for serenading in a library but the thought is there. Spontaneity can be romantic, too. Is there an Improv show you could take her to? Goofy motel shaped like a wigwam you can stay for the night? Drinks on the roof of a police station? A home cooked dinner then watching VOLUNTEERS on TV (that's if you REALLY want to pull out all the stops)?

When I was a teenager and wanted to really make an impression I did not take my dates to expensive restaurants. First off, I couldn't afford them, and secondly "this" made more of an impact. Eckberg's Steakhouse. This is a small excerpt from my upcoming book on growing up in the '60s:

I took Helen to Eckberg's Steakhouse. This was maybe my favorite restaurant in the world. It was in an actual house, on a side street off Ventura Blvd. in Woodland Hills. The living room had been converted to a dining room large enough for maybe six or seven tables. You could see into the kitchen where the stork-like Mr. Eckberg cooked the steaks. His dowdy wife was the waitress. All she would ever say was "ice box rolls" when she put a basket of them on your table.

They were both in their 70s, although who knows? They could have easily been in their 90s. They lived upstairs. Mr. Eckberg was a force of nature. He took your order, he cooked your steak, and all the while, cackled like an insane person. If a customer put a nickel into an old juke box, the song "I'm Looking Over a Four Leaf Clover" would play. Mr. Eckberg would turn it up full blast and begin to dance and sing at the top of his lungs, all the while ringing dozens of bells. Helen thought this was a riot.

Mr. Eckberg would only take cash, and when you paid at his antique register he would chortle, "Money, money, money!" ring a few bells, and make you kiss a rubber chicken.

See if there's an "Eckberg's" somewhere in your town.

For girls, wanting to please their guys on Valentine's Day, it's much easier and requires much less thought. Just give them sex.

Happy Valentine's Day. Tomorrow the romance continues with my surviving a harrowing cyclone in the Tasman Sea.

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