Valentine’s Day Disaster: My Shadowban Struggle and a Love Letter to You
Valentine’s Day used to be a neat little script: pick a card, overcook pasta, ignore the third heart-shaped candle melting into a waxy puddle. This year, the script unraveled online. I posted a goofy video — a slow-motion pasta toss, a wink, a bad crooning — and watched the view count flatten like a deflated balloon. No likes, no comments, no heart emojis. Just silence. That’s when I learned the modern heartbreak: a shadowban.
At first I shrugged. Algorithms are mysterious; maybe Wi-Fi gremlins intercepted my content. But the more I refreshed, the more it sunk in: my little corner of the internet had been boxed off like a forgotten postcard in an attic. People I know were getting notifications about other creators, and my notifications were absent. Valentine’s Day, of all days.
I swung between theatrical outrage and private embarrassment. One minute I drafted an impassioned thread about censorship; the next I was pleading to my two followers for sympathy. I imagined my account as a ghost town lit by a single stubborn streetlamp — me, doing a monologue to tumbleweeds.
In that hollow quiet, something honest unfurled: I could choose what I wanted from the day. If the internet wouldn’t amplify my Valentine, maybe this was a cue to go analog. I lit a real candle (the heart-shaped one that had survived previous disasters), cooked ridiculous pasta from leftovers, and wrote a letter by hand. Not for a camera, not for validation — just because I wanted to say something true.
Here’s that letter, folded and tucked into an envelope I almost didn’t address:
Dear You,
