It was 32 degrees and I was sharing a car with three family members for a little over five hours. You might well ask why: I often asked why when we were crawling through the roadworks on the M6 and into the second hour of the car name game.
The reason was love.
Sure, he drives me crazy and invokes eye-rolling like no one else can dare to, but I can't help but love my dad.
So, my brother and I bought him tickets to the darts. The PDC World Matchplay Darts to be exact.
I was a little terrified. I'd seen the darts on telly and it looks quite rowdy. I am not. As a rule. But Dad loves the sport, so along we went. My dad, my uncle, my brother and I were on an Isham road trip up north to the glitz and glamour of Blackpool.
Finally arriving at our hotel along the prom, we peeled ourselves out of sweaty clothes and changed into marginally less sweaty wear, only to cram into Blackpool Winter Gardens with thousands of other people who were sat closer to me than I've been to my closest friends. And they were already rowdy. I didn't think I'd last the night.
But then something strange happened.
I embraced the cheering, the sweating and the mental maths. I looked around the room and saw the love.
Everyone there was there because they loved the darts. #lovethedarts
They loved the game of darts.
They loved some of the players.
They loved hating some of the other players.
They loved the drama of it.
They loved the spectacle of it.
They loved the community of it.
It was a room full of (sweaty) love and beauty.
I loved the beauty of the Winter Gardens architecture.
I loved the effort people put into their ridiculous costumes.
I loved the signs people were writing to hold up to the TV cameras to their nan / their boss / the general public at home.
I loved the kids keeping quiet on their phones whilst parents let loose.
I loved the disappearing drink dregs near the teenagers who'd been dragged along on the annual family pilgrimage.
I loved the chat between groups of strangers on the long banquet style tables.
I loved the pumping beats at the end of every leg of the games.
I loved the pizza box flipped into the air by the Scottish man practically sat on my lap when his local hero did well.
I loved the flippy scroll banner contraption that I could thrust into the air with joy at every 180.
Everyone there loved it. There was something special about how a collective love sweeps you along. By the end of the night, I was deeply invested in a match between two men I'd never heard of three hours previously and roared along with everyone else in the room at each thud of the dart into the triple twenty.
According to the chant (I told you it was rowdy), you had to "Stand up, if you love the darts!". I was on my feet for most of the evening. It was very easy to #lovethedarts.
I already knew I would fall in love the next day. We were set for a slight change of pace in the Blackpool Tower Ballroom. There we found scores of people swirling round the famous dance floor. Despite it being a warm weekday afternoon, the tables around the dance floor were all occupied, even though some just had cardigans holding the seats whilst the wearers were otherwise occupied with a waltz.
I knew I would love it before I got there, and of course I did. I had a swelling of emotion and felt ridiculous trying to stem my stinging nose as I first looked around in awe of the decoration, the ambience but most of all of the people bringing the ballroom to life.
These weren't celebrity dancers; they were 'the regulars' as the lady on the till had told us. The people who live to come and take to the floor with their friends and partners to the sound of the organ on the stage, for the love of the dance.
It was beautiful. The dancers were the most beautiful I've ever seen.
I loved the tables of older folk chatting and laughing and drinking tea and deciding when the music moved them to dance.
I loved the red velvet backed chairs.
I loved the smiling lady in the pale blue dress gracing a different partner every tune with her presence.
I loved the cheeky fella with the psychedelic waistcoat and bow-tie making his partners lose concentration by laughing.
I loved the elegant lady taking the lead with a visitor who wanted to try their feet in the ballroom.
I loved the lady dancing with the gent in the wheelchair, easily winning the twirling stakes.
I loved the fact that the Viennese Waltz is the ballroom version of Mr Brightside where no one is left sitting down when it plays. Banger.
I loved the two older ladies dancing with each other and obviously having a complete ball.
I loved the tea and cake I enjoyed whilst watching the dancing.
I loved sitting on the balcony and watching the hypnotic scene below until my face ached from smiling.
Our love for Dad had driven us to the town of Blackpool, and I was glad to share its spirit and its fish and chips with my loved ones.
Blackpool is a place that wears its heart on its sleeve. Everyone there is happy to share their passions and they do so with no qualms or worries about how they might appear to others.
To wear a satin ballgown and matching gloves at 1pm on a Wednesday or to dress as a seagull in a packed ballroom on the hottest day ever in Blackpool comes from a place of love. In the current climate of confusion and hatred, we need to cultivate more love in our daily lives. I, for one, will stand up to being a bit more Blackpool and do what I love.