Valentine’s Day arrives with a script.
Flowers. Reservations. Long tables set with candles and expectations.
Love, neatly packaged between dessert and the bill.
For doctors, Valentine’s Day tends to arrive a little differently. Sometimes it shows up during ward rounds. Sometimes as a late admission. Sometimes as a phone buzzing just as the appetizer arrives — an oddly reliable reminder that medicine has impeccable timing and absolutely no manners.
When doctors say we love our work, we rarely mean it the way Valentine’s Day cards do. We don’t mean it’s easy. We don’t mean it’s romantic. And we certainly don’t mean it always loves us back. What we usually mean is something quieter.
Love, for doctors, looks less like celebration and more like presence. It is choosing to stay when it would be easier to leave. It is showing up on ordinary days, and especially on difficult ones. It is caring even when the outcome is uncertain, and sometimes when gratitude never comes - occasionally accompanied by an online review that begins with “The doctor was competent, but…”
Most doctors I know have missed at least one Valentine’s Day dinner. Some have missed many. Not out of indifference, but because illness does not check the calendar. Pain does not wait until Monday. And neither do the people who need us. This is not a complaint. It’s simply the shape of the work.
When doctors say they love medicine, what we are really saying is that we have accepted a relationship that asks a lot. It interrupts plans. It calls at inconvenient hours. It rarely apologizes. And yet, somehow, it gives enough meaning to make us stay. That meaning is not found in grand moments. It lives in smaller ones.
• A patient who squeezes your hand before surgery.
• A family member who mouths thank you when words won’t come.
• A colleague who quietly covers your shift so you can make it home — just this once.
This is the other side of Valentine’s Day for doctors: the love that isn’t named, but is practiced. It is also the love extended by the people around us — by partners who learn to eat dinner alone without resentment, by children who understand why bedtime stories sometimes happen over the phone, and by parents and friends who stop asking, “Can’t someone else handle it?” and start asking, “Are you okay?”
Doctors don’t survive on passion alone. We survive because someone, somewhere, loves us back enough to absorb the cost of what we do. And we, in turn, learn to love our work not as an all-consuming romance, but as a long commitment - one that must coexist with the rest of our lives if it is to endure.
Perhaps that is what Valentine’s Day offers doctors, after all: not a reminder of what we miss, but a moment to notice how love quietly rearranges itself around this profession. Not loudly. Not perfectly. But faithfully.
So if you see a doctor working today — on Valentine’s Day — know this: they are not loveless, or careless, or immune to the day’s meaning. They simply express love a little differently. And tomorrow, when the flowers wilt and the reservations are forgotten, that quieter version of love will still be there — steady, practiced and very much alive.