According to the Greeting Card Association Americans will spend over
$150 million on greeting cards for Valentine’s Day this year. According to calling services
provider VIP Communications Inc. long-distance calls from overseas will
triple in volume during Valentine’s Day.
Fifty-one percent of Americans will buy candy, over 30% will buy
flowers, and others will purchase reasonable gifts such as sweaters, coats and
winter accessories.
Valentine's Day is so commercialized these days. Advertisers show
commercials that focus mainly on buying women gifts. They also make women believe that the only
time a man should show affection is on Valentine's Day. I believe if you show affection all year long
you won't have to dash at the last minute to buy an expensive gift. If couples treat each other with respect,
communicate with each other and live in love, Valentine's Day will not seem as
one the biggest holidays of the year.
Valentine's Day gifts and memories should be a bonus to a healthy
relationship not a chore or ultimatum of "he or she better get me
something nice or else". Gifts
should not be a measure of how much someone loves and you should not fall in
love or like with someone because of the gifts they buy.
If you know your significant other is financially strapped don't be
selfish and ask for or expect an expensive gift for Valentine’s Day. Be realistic and understanding and know that
sometimes men need a little help with gift ideas. Be appreciative of whatever you get, it’s the
thought that counts, unless you get a letter opener. Here are 13 fabulous ways to celebrate
Valentine's Day and save money.
- Know your partner. If your partner or spouse gets very excited about Valentine’s Day and wants a big gift, then you better get out your wallet and spend accordingly. If your partner or spouse likes simple gifts or gifts from the heart then buy that. Not everyone likes chocolate, teddy bears or flowers so know who you are shopping for.
- Ask. Don’t be afraid to get gift suggestions from your partner or spouse. Ask them what they need or would like to do for Valentine’s Day. If they don’t tell you ask their best friend, sibling or mother for gift suggestions.
- Avoid going into debt. If you can’t afford to buy a gift or spend money be honest. Don’t wait until the last minute and buy a cheap gift or grab something without putting any thought into the gift, it will show. Find inexpensive ways to show your love. Next year plan ahead and save up to buy a gift.
- Going out. If you suspect your date feels uncomfortable or is short on cash offer to split the bill and don't get upset about it. Things happen. At least he or she was thoughtful enough to want to spend time with you. He or she may just be afraid to admit he or she is having financial problems.
- Be creative. Write a love letter or love note. If you aren't in love yet, write a note expressing how you feel and what you like about your significant other. However, don’t use this in lieu or a gif. It may not go over too well and you may be in the doghouse for a few days.
6. Be different.
Everyone buys roses on Valentine's Day.
Find out what her favorite flower is and buy that instead of roses. It will show her that you are thoughtful, a
leader not a follower and that you really care.
7. Give from the
heart. If you get a balloon or chocolate get your significant other's name on
it or get personalized chocolates or baked goods.
8. Purchase a quick
getaway. Check online for specials for bed and breakfast inns that are
inexpensive or stay overnight in a local hotel room.
9. Do a
staycation. Send the children out
overnight. Clean the house. Cook a meal, draw a bubble bath and enjoy
each other’s company if you can’t afford to buy each other gifts.
10. Be romantic. Give
each other massages with scented massage oils, read love poetry, watch romantic
movies, slow dance, gaze into each other's eyes, and then have
"desert".
11. Free. Check your local newspaper for free events
during Valentine's Day weekend.
12. Be a chef. If your significant other likes baked goods.
Bake their favorite baked good and feed it to them or fix breakfast in bed.
13. Work. Offer to
clean the house, do chores or complete your “honey do list”.
4 comments:
I am a new business owner and we are trying to get ourselves set up with a corporate credit card. What does that process entail for a business? What companies out there offer credit cards for a company?
bryanflake1984| http://www.edealinfo.com/creditcards/
Sadly my valentines days was too expensive and i never seen this immediately but then i am still happy cause i got a nice valentines next time i will surely follow all of this ways.
Hi Bryan, thanks for your comment. Thousands of companies offer credit cards depending on what you are looking for: low interest rate, cash back rewards, secured cards, etc. You can search for business credit cards at http://www.creditcards.com/.
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