How to Write the Perfect Love Letter to Your Wife

Mary Walton
P.S. I Love You
Published in
4 min readJan 16, 2018

You might think writing a love letter to the woman you love is a dead art form. I mean, apart from bills and your local greengrocer, who sends letters these days?

The fact of the matter is that modern technology has made it even more special when letters are sent, especially when it’s to someone you love dearly. What better way is there to put your feelings out there, make her day and give her something to remind her of how special you think is truly is.

Lost for words? Here’s everything you need to know about writing the perfect love letter.

Don’t Write a Love Letter

This first point may sound a little bit contradicting but it’s true. When writing your letter, there’s no need to try and make it sound like a love letter, or what your idea of one is. It doesn’t have to follow a set format or layout; it doesn’t have to rhyme or anything like that.

“Don’t set your out with an expectation of what your love letter is going to be like. If it comes from the heart, that’s all that matters,” shares Jennifer Coutle, a writer at Academized.

Sourcing Ideas

You could have a million and one thoughts flying through your head, but when you sit down to write, well, writer’s block can affect us all. If you’re stuck for ideas and you don’t know where to begin, try writing in the past, present, future format.

This means start about talking about your past as a couple, maybe how you met, before moving on to how you feel in the present day. Then you can end by talking about all the plans you have for the future.

Not Right First Time

When writing your letter, it can be disheartening when you’ve sat and written an entire piece, and you read it back only to realise that you’re not happy with it at all. That’s okay, and there’s no reason to beat yourself up over it.

Writing something that comes from the heart is no easy feat so even it takes several times to get it right, you’ll get there in the end. You might want to start practising now though if you want to get it done by Valentine’s day!

Check Writing Tools

Although a handwritten note is incredibly special, there’s no reason you can’t use a computer to get the ball rolling when trying to write your letter. What’s more, there’s a tonne of services and tools out there you can use to make your letter perfect;

Lay vs Lie; Grammarix — These two blogs are full of posts which you can refer to when questioning how to use grammar.

Assignment Writer — This online service is ideal when it comes to editing and proofreading your love letter.

Cite It In — A free online tool to add quotes, citations and references to your love letter.

Assignment Help; Essay Roo — A writing agency full of professional writers who can help guide you through the writing process.

State of Writing; My Writing Way — These are two blogs full of writing guides you can download and use to write your love letter.

Type My Essay — This is an online writing agency with a plethora of writing courses you can use to practice and learn, as recommended by the HuffingtonPost in Write Me An Essay.

Word Counter — A free online tool you can use to track the word count of your love letter.

Get Personal

The most important thing to remember when writing your love letter is to make it personal. You don’t want it to sound like anybody else has written it or that it’s just a generic letter that could apply to anyone who gave it to their partner.

Include details of events, memories or just little things that only your other half will understand. The whole idea of a love letter is that you’re only giving it to your wife and it’s for nobody else’s eyes so include whatever details that stand out from your relationship.

Forget About Appearances

At the end of the day, it doesn’t really matter if your letter is typed, handwritten or even written in crayon, it’s completely up to you and your relationship. It’s easy to fall into the trap of trying to make everything look perfect, which is nice because you want it to be readable, but the message is far more important.

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