Author Archives: Alan Ilagan

Powder Blue Briefs, Striped Socks & The Passing of Time

What decade this scene depicts is anyone’s guess. If I had to place the influence and surroundings, I’d go with somewhere between the 70’s and 80’s – right in that neat niche in which I was born and raised. There wasn’t much to be said for taste or elegance, yet there was a raw, wooden-paneling kind of incandescent warmth that seems to be missing from the memories made today.

I feel old now.

At least, older.

The passing of time is a palpable thing.

The space between the ticks and tocks feels smaller.

There is no longer the expanse of a year or a month or even a week – it all rushes by so quickly. Where once a season seemed to last a lifetime, now it’s the quick turning of a calendar page. Sometimes I forget to flip the month until we are a week or more in, and then it feels like I’ve lost the bulk of it anyway.

Pockets of timelessness are still to be found, often in the night and in the relative solitude of a stay in Boston. Loneliness doesn’t usually reach me there, even if I find myself missing Andy and the comfort of our bed. One grows accustomed to company after almost twenty years. The company of oneself doesn’t count.

You don’t always see the movement of years in the mirror. We give too many looks in a given day to sense the change. Only in photos and timehops do we notice the ravages of time. Oddly enough, I’ve never much minded getting older. I was an old soul from the day I was born. 

That’s not to say that my vanity hasn’t fought against it, in fittingly vain fashion. There’s no point in fighting the inevitable – the best you can do is delay. At this point I’d rather face these things head-on. Charge into the future with the wisdom we’ve gained, the gray hairs we’ve grown, and every wrinkle we’ve earned.

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The Mindful Shower

These have been a challenging few months for me, and I’m doing my best to work through things that stretch back decades. Throughout this journey, however, I’ve attempted to take things one little step at a time. Focusing on the end result or the larger picture had previously been my modus operandi, but lately that has failed me. And really, that’s no way to go through life. You end up missing out on the present moment, all the little day-to-day, minute-to-minute joys that you could, and perhaps should, be savoring. I don’t want to rush through it all just to die at the end wondering what the hell happened. In an effort to be more present, I’ve been looking into mindfulness and meditation as a way to calm the rush of our daily life. That begins with learning to appreciate the beauty and the gratitude in the mundane. My introduction to that philosophy is just taking place, as I’ve started reading ‘The Miracle of Mindfulness’ by Thich Nhat Hanh. One has to begin somewhere…

In the first chapter, the author goes into the idea of ‘washing dishes to wash the dishes’. The act was the goal, and the focus should be solely and completely on the act itself – not the idea of getting to sit down and rest afterward, not on the image of a completed pile of dishes done and dried and put away. It should be a simple act of being wholly present and inhabiting the moment. Unsure if I could find such peace in dishes, I put a different spin on it and tried to make a mindful shower.

It was after a restless night of troubled sleep. Awakened by an ice storm, and the tiny pings and ticking of ice against the windows and roof, I thought of being more mindful and putting the troublesome burdens that weighed upon my mind into the background. With the electricity going on and off a few times, and the repeated hammering of ice on the windows, it felt like our home was under attack from outside forces. I’ve always been sensitive to such attacks, and they’ve filled me with unease. I decided to try some mindfulness to get out of that muck.

For the next few minutes, I would focus only on the shower, wishing mindfulness for myself, as well as all others, sending out a wish into the universe that everyone taking a shower feels the same connection to the moment. I wasn’t sure I could be that empathetic, or if it would feel as false and hokey as I thought it might, but as I stepped into the warm stream of water, I did my best to wish wellness to everyone else. A hot shower is a luxury I’ve never taken for granted.

I rolled the soap in my hands, paying attention to the resulting foam, the way it started awkwardly then turned smooth and easy. For the first time, I stood there and actually felt the warmth of where the water was hitting me. I connected to it, and a few worries were displaced by the feeling. Tilting my head back, I felt the warmth roll over my face and neck. Wetting my hair, the water immersed me completely in its heat. It traveled down my shoulders and back, rounding my elbows and running down my arms. I turned and felt it travel over my lower back and butt, racing down my legs and splashing about my feet.

The conditioner in my hair smelled of green tea and cucumber. It was a pleasant scent, one on which I never really focused much. It had only ever been a way of making my hair easier to comb. On this morning, I made note of its texture, the way it smoothed out every strand of hair, and how sweetly it smelled. I felt its silkiness as I massaged it out with streams of warm water. What indulgence exists in such heat and sensual pleasures. This wasn’t some obscenely expensive bottle of Tom Ford, this wasn’t some decadent spa in a five-star hotel. This was the mundane ritual of a morning shower, suddenly imbued with significance and meaning and joy. Another troubled thought flew fleetingly across my mind, but I did my best to return to the task and moment at hand.

A bar of unscented goat milk soap swirled in my hands. I cupped the foam over my body, feeling the skin running smoothly against more skin, aided by the bubbles, loosening the remnants of the night. I bring it to my nose to smell the scent of clean – there’s no other way to describe it – and I become conscious of my efforts to make a mental note of things. I don’t yet know if that’s bad or good, so I let it be, and go back to focusing on the act of the shower. Washing my face, I relax into the feeling of fingers on my cheeks and forehead, then arch my head back and simply allow the warmth of the water to flow over my eyes and nose and lips and chin.

After switching the water off, the fluffiness of a simple white towel engulfs me. I try to make note of every fiber soaking up moisture, the way my skin dries, still warm from the shower. There is a feeling of peace. It goes away shortly after I rush back into the morning routine, and worries and concerns of the day and previous night return, but the experiment had been a success. It was possible to be mindful. It was possible to bring deliberate purpose and pause to something as mundane as taking a shower. I understood it was only a beginning, and just a glimpse of the realm of what might be, and that was enough. 

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The Magic of Making A Mistake

Shedding the vile traits of perfectionism is no easy feat. It takes work and energy and repetition to undo years of self-inflicted damage, and mental gymnastics to switch up a train of thought that long ago left the station. Yet that’s precisely what I’ve been learning to do, and a major part of that is owning up to mistakes, learning from them, accepting they will happen, and not letting them completely derail the day.

“I am glad that I paid so little attention to good advice; had I abided by it I might have been saved from some of my most valuable mistakes.” ~ Edna St. Vincent Millay

To err is human, and before I even get to forgiveness, I have to learn to be a better human. One thing at a time. This is challenging enough on its own. To sit with your missteps, and to be ok with what you have done takes time and practice. I’ve only been working on this stuff for a couple of months, but I’ve felt a change already. It’s not always comfortable, and some days I think I’ve tried to do too much, but still I keep going, still I hang on and do my best. I fail a little, and then I try to do better. The overall arc is upward.

“It is a mistake to look too far ahead. Only one link of the chain of destiny can be handled at a time.” ~ Winston Churchill

No one is right all of the time. No one is perfect. Humans are messy creatures – mentally, emotionally, physically – we stumble through our lives barely keeping our shit together. Even the most seemingly flawless person has their faults and imperfections. Usually we love them more for it, as it’s difficult to relate to someone who comes close to perfect.

“It is always a mistake to be plain-spoken.” ~ Gertrude Stein

So let this post be a reminder, mostly to myself, that we are all no more than human. We will not achieve the perfection that is unattainable based on our inherent natures. We were not designed to be without flaws. They make us who we are – and they make us better.

“Some of the worst mistakes in my life were haircuts.” ~ Jim Morrison

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A Box of Frivolity

Pink and purple tissue paper lines the floral-festooned box. Buffeted by feathers and deconstructed silk flowers, with perhaps the faintest wisp of Tom Ford’s ‘Lavender Palm’ Private Blend (and just the slightest dash of ‘Beau de Jour‘) it makes a formidably frivolous collection of little gifts and letters. A few books line the bottom of the box – including one on ‘Peaceful Places in Boston‘ – which actually includes a pretty comprehensive list of some wonderful spots.

This is a collection of frivolity assembled for Alissa’s daughter, in the hopes of sending some cheer in the midst of this desolate winter. Mostly it’s empty prettiness, but there’s a value in being pretty if you know not to take any of it too seriously.

I realize this is small and meaningless recompense for the loss of a parent, but it’s all I have to give. That and the promise that she has one more person watching out for her, wherever her adventures may lead.

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Artfully & Nakedly Rendered

Perennial nude favorite Pietro Boselli drops his pants in this brief but effective post highlighting some of his most prominent assets. See as equally-much of his nakedness here, here, here, here, and here. And then go here, here, here, or here. Trust me, all the links are worth a click and a scroll. 

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The Return of Fargesia

Hints of spring, courtesy of a shadowless groundhog, put me in the mind for a look to the future. We’re coming up on breaking the hump of winter, and this is the shortest month of the year to boot. One of the most exciting prospects of a spring to come is the return of Fargesia nitida, a clump-forming bamboo that is as functional and hardy as it is elegant and beautiful. For the past couple of years, this bamboo variety was finishing up its devastating once-a-century blooming wave, which kills off the plants in a widespread massacre. Our two specimens were part of this mass flowering extinction, much to our sadness and regret, but what luck to witness the once-in-a-lifetime flowering of the fountain bamboo. Now that the event is over, it’s once again safe to plant new bamboos, as the next flowering won’t happen for another hundred years. 

It’s good to look ahead. While I’ve been trying to live more in the moment, in the winter a light ahead certainly helps, and I do better when planning and looking forward. For the gardening trajectory this year, there will be a lot of editing and paring down, a great deal of cutting back and opening spaces up. Since we’ve moved in we’ve done a lot of filling in, and the plants have taken a liking to where they are and are encroaching on living space. It’s lush and full, but I’ve come to appreciate light and air and space and expanse, something that can only be conjured through some judicious pruning and cutting back. That also means we will be making some room for a few new additions. I expect some losses due to the continuing cycle of heaving we’ve had of late – freeze and thaw, freeze and thaw – which is not good for the gardens. Fortunately, we are looking for extra room for a few Fargesia nitida bamboo plants, as well as some new roses for Andy.

The thoughts of bamboo swaying gently in a summer breeze, and leaning into the perfume of a precious rose, are enough to see us through the difficult days.

 

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Scent of a Prick

When you’ve already released a fragrance called ‘Fucking Fabulous’, the name ‘Rose Prick’ almost feels rather quaint. Of course it’s meant to be more provocative than that, as Tom Ford does so often and so well, but it’s the essence of rose that appeals to me more than the quad-controversial prick part, so let’s get into what I’ve read and heard about this mysterious cock-tease of a scent, and why I so badly desire it even as it’s yet unsniffed. 

Given its powder pink packaging and rose-tinted moniker, I initially didn’t give this one much thought or consideration, especially after the disappointment that was ‘Lost Cherry’. My indifference should have been a warning to me, like a protective thorn, that I should pay closer attention. The world seems to work that way, and once early reports came in indicating that this fragrance was not what it first seemed, I pricked my ears up and listened for the universal whispers. 

My first concern was that this was a redux of ‘Oud Fleur’ which is a rose-centered smoky oud delight, and one of my favorites, and I don’t believe in repeating or approximating Private Blends when they’re so expensive, but I was quickly schooled that this wasn’t anything like ‘Oud Fleur.’ Still, I sought out some excuse not to get into this, and we all know how it goes when you try to resist.

A few online sources provided additional firsthand information – this was not a super floral rose that ventured decidedly into stereotypically feminine territory. If anything, it was a patchouli and tonka-centered oriental take on rose, which is infinitely more appealing to me. Sillage and lasting power were reportedly in full TFPB effect, making this worthy of its price tag. Now I’m thorn, I mean torn, because I really covet this from everything I’ve heard, including the way it carries some serious pepper notes which I absolutely adore. 

I’ll be honest, I was not in the market for another Tom Ford Private Blend – I’ve got enough for life – but this one may delay that judicious decision. The heart wants what it wants as Valentine’s Day approaches…

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Recapping With Super Bowl Poses

Posing like a fucking boss, this is my tribute to the Super Bowl, and I’m taking the lazy way out with a simple Monday morning recap. A lot of stuff went down this past week, most of which didn’t make the blog. Read between the lines of this recap, and strike a muscle pose. Like a meathead. Wearing spectacles. (Oh, and follow me on TikTok or whatever you’re supposed to do there – I’m on it, I’m into it, I’m TikToking for you – for all of you!)

Hello again, Earl. (That’s Mr. Grey to you.)

It’s been three months since I had any booze and, oddly enough, I don’t miss it one bit. 

Winter pining.

Andy’s ongoing Audi adventure.

It was a snowy winter morning in January, and that has made all the difference.

I took Suzie to see Matthew Bourne’s ‘Swan Lake’ this past Friday and it was just as enchanting as I remembered it. (Suzie may have fallen asleep at one point. And she left a huge mess on our table at the Russian Tea Room, but I told all the servers who stopped by who did it.)  

Dreaming of Ogunquit makes the winter bearable. 

Speaking of winter, we have entered the final full month of the beast, and though it’s a leap year it’s still a short one. 

Chicken soup for the soul and the stomach.

Baring my ass for the Dolly Parton Challenge, like you knew I always would. 

This Super Bowl mocktail is counter-programming at its best. 

The limited selection of Hunks of the Day included Taylor Swift’s beau Joe Alwyn, Charles Michael Davis and Patrick Mahomes. (More to come this week, I promise!)

 

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A Rare Super Bowl Mocktail

Today is traditionally about the beer and the beer commercials, but for anyone looking to extend a Dry January, or just veer away from the liquor for a little/long while longer, here’s some counter programming to the gluttonous Super Bowl booziest currently going on across this great country. Welcome to the Blood Orange Sunrise – a glass of vermillion effervescence that actually won’t have you clamoring for alcohol once you’re hit with all of its layers of flavor. 

The recipe comes from Clare Liardet’s charming collection of mocktail creations, ‘Dry: Non-Alcoholic Cocktails, Cordial and Clever Concoctions.’ I’m planning on working my through most of the cocktails included, and we begin with the Blood Orange Sunrise since blood oranges are in season and we need something to light up the night with color and pizzazz.

This one works well for the holidays (as evidenced by these photos from late last year) but will also see you through the doldrums of winter, when we need light and color and excitement. The Blood Orange Sunrise contains just enough of each, and here’s how it shakes down:

  • 1/2 cup pomegranate juice
  • Juice of 1 1/2 blood oranges
  • Juice of 1/2 lime
  • 1/2 Tbsp honey
  • Sparkling water or seltzer
  • Twist of blood orange peel and/or pomegranate seeds for garnish
  • Ice

It’s the easiest thing to make – just combine the juices and honey with some ice in a tumbler, top with sparkling water and garnish as desired. There was a Blood Orange Sangria seltzer flavor available this holiday season, so I was using that for this one and it worked out splendidly. Don’t skip either the lime or the honey – both are integral for the magical alchemy that lends this its zip and freshness. 

May this be the beginning of more cocktail madness to come. Happy Super Bowl Sunday everybody! Let the bowling commence! 

 

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The Dolly Parton Challenge

How is it that Dolly Parton has not played a more prominent role on this website in all these years? Who doesn’t absolutely adore Dolly? As part of the gay population, I believe it’s in our handbook that loving Dolly Parton is one of the mandatory non-negotiable requirements. A minimum qualification if you will. Luckily, it’s always come rather easily to me, having been raised on her movie ‘9 to 5’ and its accompanying fingernail-clicking title track. Plucky, kind and fabulous beyond all get-out, Ms. Parton has defied the limitations of country music, and even more impressively the rules of the entire entertainment industry, surviving and thriving in a successful career that has spanned decades, without ever really going out of style.

Case in point is the viral Meme seen below, where she cheekily shows off the various versions of herself that she would use for social media and immediately rendering her relevant once again. It is as much a showcase for her chameleonic nature as it is for a modern-day flourish of social media savvy. (For the record, I’ve never been on Tinder or Grinder or a 3-ring Binder, but oh if these social media sites had been around during my dating hey-day… actually, I think we all – the whole lot of us – offer unending gratitude that they weren’t. Think: hot mess minus the hot.)

PS – Follow me on TikTok under ‘alanilagan’ and be in awe. I just love the TikTok! 

 

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Chicken Soup for the Stomach and the Soul

As the final dredges of the flu limped through my weary system, I mustered the energy to make a quick soup. Andy asked if I wanted the chicken defrosted that morning, but I wasn’t sure I’d be up for it so I didn’t bother. Now, I began the assembly and figured I could find some beans for protein if there wasn’t chicken.

Gray skies sputtered a bit of wet snow and rain, but nothing to substantial. There was a gloominess, however, and a bit of soup was always an antidote for this. I spiced up the base with garlic and ginger, then added onions and carrots and some miso paste instead of salt. Thinking better of the beans, I texted Andy, who was already en route to the market, to see if there were some cheap cuts of chicken already thawed and a helping of kale. We needed vitamins to continue the trajectory to better health.

I found some red kidney beans and added them anyway – I loved the color they gave. Andy arrived with the kale and a chicken roaster, which worked out perfectly. The soup base had cooked and was ready, and once the kale cooked for a bit I added the chicken and it was the ideal combination.

It takes two to make a soup go right.

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The Final Full Month of Winter Begins

Mercifully, this is the shortest month of the year, and as the last full month of winter that is a blessing without disguise. It seemed like we should present something fiery for February, and these scarlet berries mirror the cardinals that occasionally visit the yard and spruce things up with their fiery plumage. Though the gardens remain in a state of slumber, the cardinals and finches have been providing bits of their colorful carriage, creating temporary gardens whenever and wherever they alight. The blue jays add to this as well, mimicking the blue of the sky, etched with their striking stripes and patterns.

Even the squirrels want to get in on the winter show, traipsing along the fence and digging in the snow for a stray acorn or errant nut. Their gray coats are better at blending into the surroundings at this sad time of the year, but their actions are just as interesting as they are in the sunnier months.

In our home, we are already getting antsy for spring, which still feels a long way off. We’ll see what the groundhog has to say tomorrow, not that it’s wise to put anything of substance in that one’s paws. Winter will take as many weeks as it takes and there’s nothing much to do about it. The best thing is to find its rare pockets of beauty and enjoy them as they come.

There will be another spring, and another summer.

The sun will shine again.

The pool will beckon.

The gardens will bloom.

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Dreaming of Toe-Dipping

There’s something special that happens when you stick your toes into the sand beside the ocean. You can feel the sea pull back, and pull you deeper into the sand. It’s dizzying, and it instantly grounds you, connecting you to the natural world in a way I’ve not found anywhere else, not even in my all-too-rare brushes with the sublime. It’s been well over a year since I’ve had my toes in the sand by the sea, and I just realized it’s something I’ve been missing. 

As a substitute for that, for now, since it will have to do, I’m putting this post up to remind myself of the Beautiful Place By the Sea – Ogunquit – because it’s been too long since we were there. It’s always been a magical place for us, where the difficulties of day-to-day life melt away once we cross the bridge, where we can suspend our usual cares and worries and focus on what really matters – the way the moon pulls on the tides, the way the wind whips along the Marginal Way, the way a mid-afternoon slumber enervates the ennui of the daily lull. 

It’s always been more than a vacation, and more than an escape from living – it’s the way life should be. Let’s revisit some happy memories in the following links:

A summer day at Ogunquit Beach.

Holding the ocean in our hands, and our hearts.

Blooms upon blooms

Falling in Ogunquit.

A secret garden.

By the Way.

Walking in the woods.

A surprise for Andy.

More fall beauty in Maine.

Andy & Mom.

On the rocks.

Even in the rain, Ogunquit is beautiful

One always eats well in Ogunquit.

A lighthouse in Maine.

Raindrops keep falling on my head.

Finding the sun.

Return to the secret garden.

Sun again

Even the farewells are better in Ogunquit. 

Back at the beach.

The Marginal Way at dusk.

The family in Ogunquit.

Some seaside scenes.

A mountain in Maine.

Spring entry.

Writing it into being.

When gray is the way.

Ogunquit quietude.

More lilacs.

All of Ogunquit’s entertainments

Ogunquit whimsy.

Rich in beauty.

The fall goodbye.

And again.

Rosa rugosa.

Harvest moon over Maine.

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Swan Songs, Take Two

This evening I’m surprising Suzie with a belated gift of Matthew Bourne’s ‘Swan Lake’ at the New City Center. With its gender-swapping gay-love storyline, this has been my favorite version of the Tchaikovsky ballet, though purists may continue to cry fowl about it. Andy and I saw it a number of years ago, on a chilly night in November. We dined at the Russian Tea Room because it felt like the thematic thing to do, and I’m pretty sure I ordered their decadent classic chicken kiev, with the exploding melted butter. Tonight Suzie and I are returning to the scene of that beautiful dinner before we take in the ballet.

This version of ‘Swan Lake’ is rife with iconic imagery and psychological undertones, so who knows how we’ll both take it at this point. We both seem prone to crying these days. I’m looking forward to a little emotional exorcism if it can be done through a work of art.

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Choosing Heart & Home

It must have been January of 2001. I was staying with Andy at his house in Guilderland and we were still a new couple. Yes, we’d already thrown a holiday party together but who hasn’t? It was early morning when I awoke to a thick cover of snow on the ground and more falling from a dull gray sky. Partly dismayed and partly relieved, I was due to be in Boston for a job interview with GLAAD, and now the drive looked difficult if not impossible.
A couple of months prior to that I interviewed with them for an Office Assistant position, and I had come in second. The other person just had more experience, they said, though they genuinely liked me, told me as much, and said if anything else opened up they would be in touch. I wasn’t expecting them to call and actually mean it, and now I had an interview for a second position in a few hours.

Andy and I had had a short but difficult talk over what a job in Boston would mean, and though I didn’t want it to be so he was right that it would probably mean the end of us. I still wanted to try it. I thought my heart was in Boston and I wasn’t sure if it was with him. I can see now that I was scared.

Boston was the safer prospect. I knew Boston. I knew the loneliness that I could encounter. I didn’t know what a life with Andy would be like. It felt right thus far, but who could foresee the future? I looked to the universe for signs.

Outside, the snow fell harder. I went upstairs and looked down at Andy’s living room. I remembered the first night we kissed on his sofa. I remembered a day when I dropped by unexpectedly and found him meditating there with a crystal. I remembered a night on the floor of his bedroom when I looked into his eyes and saw the soul of someone I could love.

The light of day was seeping into the sky, fighting the snow in the air, and bringing the room into greater focus. It brought my heart into focus too, and though I knew it was risky to follow one’s heart, I also knew there was no way I could give up on what Andy and I had. I called the GLAAD office and told them there was no way I would make it to the interview that day, and in fact rescheduling wouldn’t work either, thanking them for the opportunity but I would have to pass. Hanging up, I immediately felt happiness and contentment. I bounded back into the bedroom and joined him under the covers. Later, we would get up and make a batch of my Mom’s beef stew – the best way to spend a snowy day.

There would be days when I thought back at that decision, and though I would wonder about it, I would never regret it, because we crafted something beautiful and memorable and sacred together, something which stands as a testament to our love no matter what else happens. We did it together, defying the winter snow, defying our joint fears and doubts, defying the loneliness that might otherwise result.

If given the chance again, I would do the same thing.

It was Andy. There was never a question.

He was my home.

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