SOME OF THE ILLS OF VALENTINE’S DAY CELEBRATION
Fr. Dr. Okhueleigbe Osemhantie Ãmos|Feb 13, 2026
Over the years, what many call Valentine’s Day has quietly shifted from a remembrance of Saint Valentine to a global social event driven more by emotion and commerce than by reflection. There is nothing wrong with celebrating love. Love is noble. Love is sacred. Love is necessary. Yet the modern way this day is observed has created certain unhealthy patterns that deserve honest examination.
One of the most visible problems is pressure. Couples, especially young ones, often feel compelled to prove their love publicly. Social media has intensified this competition. Who received the biggest bouquet? Who was taken to the most expensive restaurant? Who posted the most dramatic declaration? What should be quiet affection becomes public performance. Some partners fall into debt trying to impress. Others feel inadequate because they cannot afford grand gestures. In such an atmosphere, love is measured by spending power rather than sincerity.
The day also places subtle emotional strain on relationships. When expectations are exaggerated, disappointment easily follows. A forgotten gift, a modest gesture, or a simple message may suddenly be interpreted as lack of love. Arguments arise not because affection is absent, but because expectations were inflated by society. Love becomes a test to be passed on a single day instead of a daily commitment built through patience and sacrifice.
Among young people, the risks are even deeper. The intense romantic messaging surrounding the day can push teenagers into emotional and physical situations they are not prepared for. Under peer influence and cultural pressure, some equate love with sexual proof. This has led, in many parts of the world, to increased cases of premarital sexual activity, teenage pregnancies, emotional trauma, and even sexually transmitted infections. What begins as celebration can end in regret.
Jealousy and rivalry also surface strongly around this time. Discovering that a supposed partner is involved with someone else can trigger anger, humiliation, and in extreme cases violence. Around the world, incidents of fights and assaults tied to romantic disputes have been reported during Valentine’s season. Love, when mixed with possessiveness and pride, easily turns destructive.
Another silent wound of the day is the exclusion it creates. Singles, widows, widowers, and those going through heartbreak can feel forgotten or judged. The loud focus on couples suggests that worth is tied to relationship status. This message is unfair. Human dignity does not depend on whether one receives roses on February 14.
There is also the danger of reducing love to romance alone. Love is wider than romance. It includes friendship, family bonds, charity, forgiveness, and service to others. Yet the modern celebration often narrows love to romantic attraction and physical intimacy. In doing so, it neglects deeper forms of love that sustain society.
Commercialization remains one of the strongest distortions. Global businesses make enormous profits from flowers, chocolates, jewelry, cards, and luxury experiences. Advertising subtly convinces people that love must be purchased. When affection is attached to price tags, the poor feel pressured and the wealthy feel challenged to spend even more. Genuine care becomes overshadowed by material display.
In schools, the day sometimes creates unhealthy social ranking. Children who receive many gifts feel validated; those who receive none feel embarrassed. What was meant to encourage kindness can unintentionally promote exclusion and competition.
At its core, the greatest ill is the misunderstanding of love itself. Real love is not loud for one day and silent for the rest of the year. It is steady. It forgives. It protects. It grows quietly through daily acts of responsibility and faithfulness. When society concentrates all emotional energy into a single calendar date, it risks turning something sacred into something seasonal.
This reflection is not a call to abolish the celebration. It is a call to purify it. Let love be genuine, not competitive. Responsible, not reckless. Deep, not dramatic. If Saint Valentine is remembered at all, let it be for courage, sacrifice, and fidelity, not merely for flowers and photographs.
Fr. Dr. Okhueleigbe Osemhantie Ãmos is a priest of the Catholic Diocese of Uromi and a Lecturer at CIWA, Port Harcourt, Nigeria

