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Happy Love Note Day!

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It's Love Note Day!

We've been counting down the days until Love Note Day, and we're so excited that it's finally here.

If you are in love with someone, write them a love note and tell them.

If you love someone (not romantically), write them a love note and tell them.

If you hope to love someone someday, or you've loved someone, and they're now gone, write them a letter and tell them.

Share your love. Life is short, and love is the best part. The more you give love, the more you receive love.

We'd love it if you'd share your love notes with us HERE. We're collecting them and then turning them into a book. Don't worry, if you want to remain anonymous, we'll totally keep your identity a secret.

We love you!


Don't forget, we've launched an awesome Kickstarter. We're trying to document America's greatest love stories. You can help us by spreading the word, and by donating. Every dollar counts. Learn more about it here:

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Episode #26 - Are Three Wives Better Than One?

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Polygamy.

Most of us monogamous folks have hefty assumptions about plural marriage. Particularly in the case of polygyny (when a man is married to more than one wife), these descriptions aren't uncommon:

Misogynistic. Exploitive. Unethical. Ungodly. Distasteful. Selfish. Sexist.

But, how much do you know about it, really? How many of us have actually ever interacted with a polygamous family? (And, no, watching Big Love doesn't count).

Growing up, polygamy was a concept semi-grasped intellectually, but I had no observational understanding of it. In doing my research to prepare for this interview, I came across this very interesting statistic:

Globally, in a survey of 1,231 societies, only 186 were monogamous. Among the rest, 588 had frequent polygyny, 453 had occasional polygyny, and 4 practiced polyandry (when one woman is married to more than one husband at a time). (Source: Ethnographic Atlas)

...That means only about 15% of societies are monogamous.

This statistic alone raises a plethora of questions: 

  • Is polygamy the human tendency? 
  • Is monogamy the reason for our high rate of divorce in America? 
  • Are the reasons for polygamy around the world primarily economic? 
  • What does the Bible have to say about all of this? Is it more unnatural to be married to multiple people...or to one?

There are so many more, and this interview only covers the very tip of the iceberg.

But, what I can tell you about my experience during the interview is this:

The Darger family had some of the most interesting things to say about love and marriage. Any assumptions I had going into it completely melted away within moments of sitting down with them. We were greeted with open arms and hearts.

The husband, Joe Darger, said, "I feel undeserving of these three women." The wives, while admitting to struggles with jealousy, seemed to love not just their husband—but also one another. I listened to the pitter patter of their children's happy feet in the background (they have 26 kids in total, with 16 still living with them), and felt their warmth toward one another.

Polygamy is, perhaps, uncommon and frowned upon by most Americans. But, it is also misunderstood.

While my heart still desires a loving, monogamous relationship, I now have a deeper understanding of polygamy—and why some people choose it.

No matter what your stance on the topic, give this podcast a listen. If you take away from it what I did, you'll come out of this episode with an appreciation of people who love differently than you—and a richer knowledge of what it means to love big, communicate well, and honor the commitment of marriage.


Don't forget about our Kickstarter! We're raising money to travel the country to capture more love stories like The Dargers'. We'd love it if you'd contribute:

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  • Got questions about the Darger family, or polygamy? Check out their website, or reach out to them via Twitter or Facebook.
  • While you're at it, check out the Darger Family's book:

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To My One True Love

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The Last Love Letter Project is a series of hand-written love letters answering the following question:

If you could write only one last love letter to the person you love most, what would you say?

Participate in the Last Love Letter Project by writing your own letter and submitting it here.


Love Letter #1 | The Loveumentary

Love Letter #1 pt 2 | The Loveumentary

To my one true love,

We sure have been through a lot these past 17 years. All honesty, we shouldn't even be together. I've put you through some painful stuff. Things no one should ever have to experience... yet, here we are, married for over 12 years (happily, I might add), with a solid, amazing, life-giving relationship.

How can I find the words to adequately communicate just how much I love you? How do I let you know that through your love, I'm a better, stronger, humble, kinder, and grateful man? Like all things in my life, I'm not perfect, but I try and hope it's good enough.

Jenny, the kindness and grace you give me daily helps me live with kindness and grace in my life. Someone recently asked me if I considered myself successful. If by success you mean riches, toys, notoriety and material possessions, then no, but you and I both know we've chosen a different path of success. Our path is based on family and friends, memorable experiences, serving others, love and God. None of this life, our life, would be possible without your love for me.

And look at us now, babe. We were just kids when we shared our first kiss on the Longview Lake 19 years ago. This life just wouldn't be possible if it had gone any other way. It's you. It's always been you.

I love you with my whole heart, every single piece of it. Our life, the stories we're living and the adventures we go on, they matter. You and I, we live to love the world, to make it a better place for all, and we can't do that without the love we have for each other.

And this world can be a scary, sad, violent place. It's amazing the comfort I find in your eyes. The solace I find in your touch. When you wrap your arm through mine, take my hand and squeeze, I know it's all going to be ok. You're my constant reminder that life is worth living and love is worth giving... and as long as we  have each other, til death do us part, this life is magical...

Love,

Your husband


Now, go write your own love letter! You won't regret it. And if you feel like sharing the love, submit it here:

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P.S. I Hope You Like Me

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September 26th is Love Note Day! In celebration over the next week we are going to be featuring some of our favorite love notes, and love note projects… because love notes are awesome! If you share your enthusiasm for love notes, you should participate in our Last Love Letter Project. Help us spread the love.


David got this letter from Katey in 4th grade in 1994. This picture was taken at their wedding in 2006. You never know the power of one letter, or the significance it can have down the road. When are you writing your love letter?

Kid Love Letter | The Loveumentary

Send your love letters to us, and be part of the Last Love Letter Project.


We've launched our Kickstarter campaign! Please contribute and help us spread the word:

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My Darling Bar

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September 26th is Love Note Day! In celebration over the next week we are going to be featuring some of our favorite love notes, and love note projects… because love notes are awesome! If you share your enthusiasm for love notes, you should participate in our Last Love Letter Project. Help us spread the love.


Today's letter from George H. W. Bush to his wife Barbara while he was serving in the ward. She lost all of the letters he sent her... all except for this gem. They've now been married for 68 years:

My darling Bar,

This should be a very easy letter to write — words should come easily and in short it should be simple for me to tell you how desperately happy I was to open the paper and see the announcement of our engagement, but somehow I can't possibly say all in a letter I should like to.

I love you, precious, with all my heart and to know that you love me means my life. How often I have thought about the immeasurable joy that will be ours some day. How lucky our children will be to have a mother like you —

As the days go by the time of our departure draws nearer. For a long time I had anxiously looked forward to the day when we would go aboard and set to sea. It seemed that obtaining that goal would be all I could desire for some time, but, Bar, you have changed all that. I cannot say that I do not want to go — for that would be a lie. We have been working for a long time with a single purpose in mind, to be so equipped that we could meet and defeat our enemy. I do want to go because it is my part, but now leaving presents itself not as an adventure but as a job which I hope will be over before long. Even now, with a good while between us and the sea, I am thinking of getting back. This may sound melodramatic, but if it does it is only my inadequacy to say what I mean. Bar, you have made my life full of everything I could ever dream of — my complete happiness should be a token of my love for you.

Wednesday is definitely the commissioning and I do hope you'll be there. I'll call Mum tomorrow about my plan. A lot of fellows put down their parents or wives and they aren't going so you could pass as a Mrs. — Just say you lost the invite and give your name. They'll check the list and you'll be in. How proud I'll be if you can come.

I'll tell you all about the latest flying developments later. We have so much to do and so little time to do it in. It is frightening at times. The seriousness of this thing is beginning to strike home. I have been made asst. gunnery officer and when Lt. Houle leaves I will be gunnery officer. I'm afraid I know very little about it but I am excited at having such a job. I'll tell you all about this later too.

The wind of late has been blowing like mad and our flying has been cut to a minimum. My plane, #2 now, is up at Quonset, having a camera installed. It is Bar #2 but purely in spirit since the Atlantic fleet won't let us have names on our planes.

Goodnite, my beautiful. Everytime I say beautiful you about kill me but you'll have to accept it — I hope I get Thursday off — there's still a chance. All my love darling.


We've launched our Kickstarter campaign! Please contribute and help us spread the word:

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More Love Letters

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Did you know September 26th is Love Note Day? In preparation for this lovely event, over the next week we are going to be featuring some of our favorite love letters, and love letter projects...because love letters are awesome!

If you share our enthusiasm, we hope you'll participate in our Last Love Letter Project—most details below. Help us spread the love, and write a love letter today!


I have been a huge fan of the More Love Letters project for a while now.

The First Love Letter

Hannah Brencher started writing love letters to strangers in October 2010. She was at Grand Central and saw a woman getting on her train who looked lonely. She started to write a letter to her, and was so engrossed in writing that she didn't see the woman get off the train. So, she wrote, "If you find this letter, then it's for you." She folded it up, but it on her back, and quickly rushed off of the train at her stop. "You have to be stealthy," Hannah says in the video below, with a grin.

That was the very first letter she left.

She's written hundreds of letters since, and the project has caught the attention and hearts of thousands. The More Love Letters community, which is now over 20,000 people strong in all 50 states and over 50 countries, write and leave love letters all over their communities and mail handwritten letters to strangers in need.

There's something about Hannah. She just radiates a positivity and selflessness that is infectious. It's clear, from the spirit of her project and the size of her heart, that so much love goes into every single one of the letters she writes.

Her poetic vulnerability is what makes her letters feel like word truffles. They are honest, heartfelt, and cut right to the core of what all of us humans have in common: heartache, joy, a beating heart, and the desire to be loved by and connected to others.

Her letters are better than the best kind of horoscope. They leave you with that feeling: How did you know what I was going through? How did you know how much I needed this? 

Letters to a Stranger

If this project is compelling to you, get involved today! You can find more details here on how to get formally involved.

If I've learned any one thing from Hannah and the More Love Letters project, it's this:

We experience far more love when we go out and give it to people joyfully and willingly than we ever do by sitting back and waiting to receive it. You can't write a love letter to someone without feeling pure, honest love emanate out of yourself.

I'm not sure there's a better feeling in the world than that.

A Love Letter for You

I'll end this blog post with a love letter for you, dear reader. It's the one Hannah recites in the video above, and the words are breathtaking. These are for you:

To whoever finds this letter:

 

You and I have never met. We may never have the chance to sit and know the bones of one another over a cup of coffee, or a glass of wine. Regardless, that doesn't stop me from wanting the very best this life has to offer for you. You deserve that. Don't you know it's true? You deserve so much more than the little lies we learn to tell ourselves about being unworthy, and unlovable, and not deserving of the world's time. It's not true—not an ounce of it. 

 

You?

 

Well, you deserve stories that burst at the seams with beauty and resolve. You deserve days of rest and laughter, stuck in the grooves of days spent with people who take you as you are, always. Don't ever forget it. The world will try to convince you of otherwise, and I just pray you know the truth. You are a marvel—you, and all the parts of you.

Our Last Love Letter Project

Life is short.

We're inspired by people like Hannah, Danny, and Mara. So, we're starting our own letter-related project, and we hope you'll all be part of it.

This is the question we're asking the entire world:

If you could write one last letter to the person you love the most, what would you say?

...and why haven't you sent it yet?

Our message is simple: Send it now. Don't wait another day.

If you love someone, let them know... and don't forget to take part in Love Letter Day. When you're done, send us a picture of your handwritten love letter. We'll be featuring them on our site as they come in.


We've launched our Kickstarter campaign! Please contribute and help us spread the word:

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A Blog About Love

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Did you know September 26th is Love Note Day? In preparation for this lovely event, over the next week we are going to be featuring some of our favorite love notes, and love note projects... because love notes are awesome! If you share your enthusiasm for love notes, you should participate in our Last Love Letter Project. Help us spread the love.


One of my favorite love-themed blogs is A Blog About Love.

Part of what makes Danny and Mara's blog so special is how they've publicly documented their love story. They were introduced via email, and wrote each other back and forth throughout their courtship. The letters are sweet, honest, vulnerable, and a great window into the type of communication it required them to have to build the type of loving and healthy relationship that they now share.

Here are some of my favorites:

How It All Began

Mara and Danny were introduced via a mutual friend. He lived in Boston. She lived in New York City. Both had recently gone through divorces, but Danny's was more recent. It's obvious that they had chemistry after their first emails were exchanged.

Vulnerability

Before Danny and Mara had met in person, they had the chance to open up and be incredibly vulnerable with each other. They affirm that that vulnerability was and is a blessing in their marriage. This set of letters shows the sense of relief and joy they both experienced at feeling fully accepted and loved... especially after both having gone through difficult divorces.

It's obvious that they hadn't yet broken the "I Love You" barrier, but they were both feeling it. It's funny to watch them say how much they love about the other person without actually saying the 3 little words.

I Love You

Yup. They drop the "L-bomb." It was fate that these two would come together through their hardships.

Not to mention this:

Will this not be the absolutely coolest set of emails to look back on/share with our kids?

Reading these letters made me realize how important it is to document our lives... especially the good parts. Love letters are such a fantastic way to relive some of our most beautiful moments. They stand as a testament of how we feel about the people we love most.

How powerful to have a physical manifestation of love.

Life is short. If you love someone, let them know... and don't forget to take part in Love Letter Day, and participate in the Last Love Letter Project.


We've launched our Kickstarter campaign! Please contribute and help us spread the word:

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Soulmates

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What is a soul mate, anyway?

People commonly use the word to describe the most perfect person in the world for them, otherwise known as "The One." Some say we only have one soul mate. Others say we have many. I say we misunderstand what the term even means.

Here are some of the definitions I found:

  • A person ideally suited to another as a close friend or romantic partner.
  • A person who strongly resembles another in attitudes or beliefs.
  • One of two persons compatible with each other in disposition, point of view, or sensitivity.
  • A person with whom one has a feeling of deep or natural affinity. This may involve similarity, love, intimacy, sexuality, sexual activity, spirituality, or compatibility and trust.

Some of these definitions are actually quite different, which leads to some of the confusion about what a "soul mate" actually is.

The major conflict amongst the definitions above seems to be the interchangeability of similarity and compatibility. These are two different concepts. Similarity means you've got matching attitudes, beliefs, and temperament. Compatibility means you're capable of existing harmoniously with another person. Sometimes, you experience compatibility with people who are very similar to you; other times, you experience compatibility with people who are quite different (the "opposites attract" phenomenon).

The mainstream understanding of what "soul mate" means isn't wrong—it's just not comprehensive.

Your soul mates are your mirrors. Even if you've never met the other person before, there's this instant recognition—it is as though you've known them forever. How do we make sense of that feeling? Here's the explanation we rarely talk about:

Our souls "mate" with other souls not always—or just—because it's a sign you should go off and get married or become best friends. They mate when we recognize ourselves in someone else—consciously or subliminally.

Soul mates aren't necessarily the people you get along with better than anyone else—the ones you share perfect, frictionless compatibility with. Sometimes, it's quite the opposite.

The people we're most similar to are the ones who make us feel the most understood—that we completely "belong." But, they are also the ones who make us feel the most uncomfortable.

Sometimes, soul mates reveal the ugliest parts about ourselves (because we tend to see other's imperfections more quickly than our own). They expose our self-limiting beliefs and behaviors or habits that hold us back. They hit you over the head with a dose of reality; "they tear down your walls and smack you awake."

They force you to question your own ego, addictions, and fallibility. In the midst of their pinpoint accuracy about your character and integrity, the thoughts and feelings they bring up in you are somewhere between deeply resonant and deeply annoying—sometimes both. Because you know what they are saying is true.

They know you. Your soul matches theirs. And their souls match yours.

That's how you're able to expose one another's truths—good and bad—so rapidly and precisely.

Soul mates are, perhaps, the most important people we'll meet in our lives. They are the ones capable of breaking our hearts open so we can deal with old wounds we've been holding on to for too long. They crack us so new light can flood in and create undeniable warmth. They make us feel so out of control that we have no choice but to deal with the unflattering parts of ourselves. They catalyze our transformation.

They bring us to our own attention, so we can understand ourselves better, and grow in unimaginably powerful, abrupt, revolutionary ways.

They shake us alive in a way no one else could.

So, it doesn't matter if the relationship we have with our soul mates is short-term or long-term, hard or easy, painful or joyful, or a mix of it all.

What matters is that we allow ourselves to be cracked open by them. That we go into the relationship with as little judgment or expectation as possible. That we dance gracefully with them. That we go into every moment with an open mind, and open heart. And that we allow ourselves to be completely, uncomfortably vulnerable.

And that we express and feel enormous gratitude and unconditional love for them.

Because they are our greatest gifts.

They are the ones who help us become the best version of ourselves.

7 Videos of Old Couples That Will Make You Want To Fall In Love

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Sometimes seeing the beauty that awaits us after a lifetime of love is all it takes to help us gather the courage to take a plunge. I hope these videos of amazing couples who have weathered the storm of life together will inspire some of you to love more deeply and honestly.

1. You Are My Sunshine Couple

2. Danny and Annie

Danny & Annie from StoryCorps on Vimeo.

3. Ted and Lucienne

4. Marlo and Fran

5. Marty and his Wife

Fred and Lorraine

6. A Letter From Fred

7. Bruce and Esther