A Valentine’s Reflection on Love Without Chasing
Sometimes clarity arrives quietly.
A love that once felt energizing begins to require more movement than expected.
More initiating.
More softening.
More explaining.
What once felt mutual starts to feel maintained.
The text is drafted and deleted.
The truth is softened before it begins.
The silence is interpreted.
The reaching continues.
Over time, it begins to feel
like holding something in place
that would not stand on its own.
Chasing can disguise itself as devotion. It can look loyal. Even faithful. But maintenance is not the same thing as mutuality.
Love without chasing does not mean love without desire.
It does not mean indifference.
It means two people turning toward one another without persuasion.
It means presence that does not need to be secured through strategy.
Real love steadies the atmosphere.
There is less scanning.
Less rehearsing.
Less bracing.
The room feels quietly open.
There is air between the present moment and the future.
Nothing feels urgent.
There is relief in no longer being the one who must begin.
Love that walks with you
feels like standing in a spacious room
where nothing needs to be proven.
The light is steady.
The doors are not closing.
No one is holding the walls up.
The soul recognizes steadiness.
As Valentine’s Day approaches, when love is often displayed more visibly than it is sustained, it may help to remember this: security does not come from spectacle. It comes from consistency.
Being chosen loudly may impress a room.
Being chosen consistently steadies a life.
For some, Valentine’s Day brings celebration.
For others, it brings memory.
For still others, it brings clarity.
For some, love now looks different than it once did.
Scripture speaks of love as abiding, not urgent.
The Shepherd does not crowd the flock into safety.
He walks ahead of it.
His nearness does not depend on your effort.
You lack nothing in His presence.
The kind that walks with you
does not require overextension to remain.
It does not create urgency where there should be peace.
It does not disappear when effort quiets.
It remains.
This is not withdrawal.
It is alignment.
It is recognition.
And beneath every human love story — steady or complicated, present or remembered — there is a deeper one quietly holding it all.
God does not ask to be chased.
He does not withdraw to test devotion.
He walks with you.
His love does not strain you into staying.
It does not measure your worth by your performance.
It does not vanish when you grow tired.
It abides.
On a day that speaks loudly about being chosen,
it may be enough to remember this: you are already held.
And the One who loves you most walks gently at your side.