Not the polished, picture-perfect February version—but the real one. The one where life is full, feelings are mixed, and love looks different depending on where you’re standing.
February has a way of making us feel like we should be doing love better.
Bigger gestures. Better relationships. Stronger feelings.
And I just want to say—gently and honestly—that real love doesn’t usually look like a romance novel.
And thank goodness for that.
Don’t Let Romance Novels Dictate Your Real Life
I love a good love story. Truly. But books are meant to inspire—not set the standard for your marriage, your relationship, or your expectations.
Romance novels are edited.
Real relationships are lived.
If you try to measure your real life against fictional love, you’ll miss the beauty of the love you’re actually building.
Romance looks different in every relationship—and the healthiest ones are cultivated, not copied.
Sometimes love looks like laughter.
Sometimes it looks like commitment.
Sometimes it looks like showing up on days that aren’t very romantic at all.
Strong relationships aren’t flashy.
They’re faithful.
Protect What You Love
Here’s something we don’t say out loud enough:
The enemy does not go after weak things.
He goes after strong marriages.
Strong friendships.
Strong families.
Because those bonds are built on love—and love is powerful and unbreakable.
So when tension shows up out of nowhere…
When misunderstandings feel heavier than they should…
When distance creeps in quietly—
Pay attention.
Don’t Let Offense Drag You Down
Offense is sneaky. It rarely shouts. It whispers.
It says:
“They should’ve known better.”
“Just pull back.”
“If they cared, they’d reach out first.”
And before you know it, silence replaces closeness.
Most damage in relationships doesn’t come from what happened—it comes from what didn’t get talked about.
Strong relationships don’t avoid hard conversations.
They survive because of them.
If something feels off, talk about it.
If something hurt, say it.
If something matters, protect it.
Love each other well. It’s worth the effort.
If You’re Single
If you’re single, February is not a reminder of what you lack.
This season can be about learning yourself—your values, your boundaries, your peace.
Romance right now might look like stability, freedom, healing, and becoming someone you trust.
There is no rush.
Love doesn’t need chasing—it needs readiness.
If You’re Divorced
Divorce changes the way you read love stories. Some chapters hurt to turn. Some endings didn’t come the way you hoped.
That doesn’t mean you failed. It means you lived through something hard.
This season may be about rebuilding trust—especially with yourself.
Letting go of shame that doesn’t belong to you.
Learning that love can be safe again.
You are allowed to believe in love—even if it looks different this time.
If You’re Widowed
If you’ve loved and lost, February can feel heavy.
Love didn’t disappear—it changed shape.
There is no timeline for healing. No rulebook for moving forward. Romance may look like honoring what was while gently learning how to live again.
Your heart still matters.
Your story isn’t over.
Your February Porch Challenge: Tend One Relationship Well
Before you move on with your day, I want you to do one small thing this week.
Not everything.
Not every relationship.
Just one.
Choose one relationship that matters to you:
Your spouse
A close friend
A family member
Or yourself
And tend it—on purpose.
Pick One (Within the Next 48 Hours)
Send the message you’ve been drafting in your head but haven’t sent
Have the conversation you’ve been avoiding—with honesty and kindness
Apologize, even if it feels uncomfortable
Say thank you for something that’s gone unnoticed
Sit with someone without multitasking
Or give yourself grace where you’ve been too hard
That’s it. One act of intentional love.
Strong relationships don’t stay strong by accident.
They’re protected.
They’re nurtured.
They’re chosen—again and again.
If something stirred while you were reading—don’t ignore it.
That name that came to mind? That nudge to reach out?
That’s your cue.
Tend what matters.
Protect what you love.
And don’t let offense live where love is meant to grow.
It is well,
Nikki Brewer