This Valentine's Day, consider what all types of love bring to your life
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[February 11, 2025]
By DEVI SHASTRI
Valentine's Day is for lovers — but you don't need a romantic soulmate
to celebrate.
The holiday is a chance to consider just how rich, diverse and
beneficial every form of love is in the human experience, whether it
comes from your family, friends, pets, neighbors or community.
Three experts shared how to nurture love in all its forms at a time when
loneliness is an " epidemic," politics are divisive and turning to
technology is often easier real-life social interactions.
You need more than just “the" love of your life
Romantic love — a deep, intimate partnership with another person or
persons — is a valuable part of life. But experts say it's good to
remember that we need to have several sources of connection.
“Especially as we get older, we recognize that no one relationship is
going to provide us with everything,” said Mikaela Frissell, a social
worker for UT Health Austin.
Love isn't something that can easily be pinned down with a single
definition or behavior, either.
As a verb, love has two things at play, according to epidemiologist
Tyler VanderWeele, who directs Harvard University’s Human Flourishing
Program. It can be both or either “unitive” — meaning you desire and
want to be with the person or thing you love — or “contributive,”
meaning you want to contribute to the good of your beloved.
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The experts also said an expanded definition and view of love opens up
the possibilities toward whom and what you can direct these “unitive”
and “contributive” feelings.
The connection between love, loneliness and health
In 2023, then-U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy declared loneliness a
public health epidemic.
Murthy's report said half of Americans have experienced loneliness and
that it poses health risks as deadly as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. The
research also found that people with poor social relationships had
higher risk of stroke and heart disease, and that isolation raises a
person's chance of depression, anxiety and dementia.
Love's strong social connections, bonding and support are linked to
better health, because it allows the brain to signal to the body that
you are safe and take your nervous system out of “fight or flight,"
Frissell said. Research shows being with loved ones can lower blood
pressure, stress hormones, reduce inflammation — even help you sleep and
better manage pain.
The ongoing Harvard Study of Adult Development, which is the
underpinning of the book “The Good Life,” showed the value of
relationships across a lifetime.
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The Robert Indiana sculpture "LOVE" stands in John F. Kennedy Plaza,
commonly known as Love Park, in Philadelphia, April 13, 2020. (AP
Photo/Matt Rourke, File)
 Anthony Chambers, a psychologist and
chief academic officer at The Family Institute at Northwestern
University, said one of the Harvard study's findings was people who
were happiest in their relationships at 50 were the healthiest
mentally and physically at 80.
“The conclusion? Building meaningful and satisfying relationships is
key to our health and well-being,” said Chambers, who worked on the
study early in his career.
How can I nurture love?
Simply put, intentionally seek out in-person connections, experts
said.
What's not so simple is planning things with other people. It may be
uncomfortable to sift through calendars to find a date for dinner
with a busy friend or to call your sibling who doesn’t have much to
talk about. Perhaps it'll be awkward to strike up a conversation
with the elderly neighbor you haven’t met or join a softball team.
Acknowledge and interrogate the fears or assumptions that keep you
from reaching out in those moments, Frissell said.
There is also doing good things for other people — even if you don't
know them that well. Frissell challenges clients to compliment
someone every day and be open to accepting one in return. The
benefits of receiving and giving love are the same, she said.
VanderWeele recommends an exercise he practices: Choose one day a
week, for six weeks, to do five acts of kindness. It forces you to
plan and prioritize kindness intentionally, just like any other
daily task, he said.
Love can build resilience
This Valentine's Day, experts encourage you to think beyond
one-on-one relationships and reflect on your community and world.
Having a commitment to a cause or group builds mental resilience,
they added.
“We all seek to be understood and validated, especially during
difficult times. And relationships are arguably the most important
context for emotional healing,” Chambers said. “When the world
around us can seem to be in chaos or we’re feeling alone,
relationships provide the opportunity for us to feel validated.”
VanderWeele also said it's important to have even “love of enemy” —
people who we don't agree with or are in opposition to us.
“The extent to which we love others well, we love our neighbors
well, shapes the society we live in,” he said.
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