Christmas Tree Tears

It’s a phenomenon no child should have to experience, though with the excitement and tantrums and rollercoasters of Christmas, I suppose most of us have at one point or another: the phenomenon of how Christmas tree lights look when viewed through tears. They become something more magical, and in some ways more beautiful – one of the rare recompenses of sorrow transforming into solace. I’d almost forgotten what that was like until the world defeated me the other day. 

I’d gone into work already feeling shaky and unsure of myself. My planned outfit didn’t work as well in the light of day as it had in my mind the night before, but it would have to do. A wave of fatigue from not sleeping well insisted on it. And just when I took one last look in the mirror while Andy was heading out to start the car, I noticed a hole in the crotch, to the right of the zipper, which made it look like the zipper was down. Maybe that’s when I gave up on the day, because I didn’t have the care or concern or energy to put on a new pair of pants. 

After a day of insanity, because in a world of Covid and madness all work days are insane, a day without taking a lunch break outside, and a day of non-stop business, I stumbled back into the car and was too shell-shocked and exhausted to speak. Andy may have wondered what was wrong but I didn’t have the strength or ability to put it into words then. When I got home and walked into the living room, I sat down and realized: I felt defeated. The day had licked me. The world had knocked it out of me. 

Later in the afternoon news came of more loved ones with Covid, and the slightly bothersome and troubling way my Mom now has of saying she wasn’t too worried about it, which kicked off the memory of a recurring nightmare I’ve had since childhood of some monster chasing her, or some terrible fate befalling her, and I’m yelling and trying to explain it to her but she doesn’t listen and it ends up catching her, and I’m screaming and crying, “I told you!! Why didn’t you listen to me?!?” and then I wake up in a mess of sweat and tears. 

When the evening had descended, I found my way to the Christmas tree. Still decorated and lit, it provided the only illumination in the room. I sat down beneath it, looking up into the branches, and I started to cry. Not because I’m going through anything particularly difficult, not because my life is any more stressful or despondent than anyone else’s – I simply let out the average weight of the world on any adult’s shoulders right now. 

The tears came quietly, and it wasn’t a terribly awful cry – it was mostly from sheer exhaustion and years of worry. When I looked at the Christmas tree though my tears, the sensation was bracingly familiar, and suddenly I was a kid beneath the tree again, hiding from some act of shame or ostracization, something that made it clear that I was very different and very alone, and that not even my family could keep me company. I felt the same loneliness and isolation that I had in my childhood, and in a way that no one else seemed to share or understand. 

Part of me understood that I was probably just tired. Tired of worrying all the time without any breaks of hope or relief. Tired of being afraid and trying to find solutions and only finding blame. Tired of canceling trips and plans and simple dinners with family and friends. Tired of trying to find some semblance of peace and beauty and warmth in this amazingly fucked-up world. Tired of attempting to make any sort of sense of it all. 

There, in the tear-stained glassy visage of Christmas lights and ornaments, where branches blurred with bulbs, I sat in silent wonder and condemnation, unable to see a way out, letting this day of defeat wash over and then through me.

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A Morning Matcha with a Side of Tchaikovsky

Peaceful mornings don’t always just happen – there sometimes needs to be intention and effort to find the quiet and stillness, especially amid the tumult that might constitute the average morning. To better ensure that space, getting up early is the most effective way to find the physical and atmospheric surroundings best suited to conjuring a moment of peace. 

Recently I awoke before 6, a good half hour before my alarm was set to go off, and rather than roll over and fall back asleep, I managed to rouse myself into a standing position and begin the day earlier than usual. Older age does that – we sleep less, we wander and ponder more. I heated a kettle of water on the stove and whisked up a cup of matcha. As we remain in the early stages of January, this selection of music by Tchaikovsky, a section entitled ‘January: By the Fireside’ from his Seasons opus, felt fitting, and lent the morning a crisp but calm air. 

Our recent cold spell, appropriate for this time of the year, and worrisomely later in coming, was not as unwelcome as I braced myself for it to be. This is winter. It’s where we should be. The gardens would actually appreciate more than the spot of snow we’ve had thus far – I can almost hear them groaning with the heaving and roller-coaster of warmer days we’ve had in the past month. Not good for the roots, not good for the spring to come. The best and only way to end winter is to go through it. 

And so I pause to honor the season, warming my hands with this cup of matcha, warming my head with the beauty of Tchaikovsky’s music, warming my soul with the idea that on some mornings it is enough simply to rise and breathe.

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Cozy Sleeper

My favorite childhood memories often involved a sleeper – that fuzzy one-piece romper that served as both pajamas and lounge wear for those aged five to ten years old. In the fall and winter, it was the cozy outfit for holidays and weekends, when a new one had shiny and slick soles that allowed you to slide across the carpet as if on ice. On Christmas vacations, my brother and I would spend days in this easy outfit, sometimes even wearing it under a snowsuit to go outside. 

Come summer, the memory was a different sort; when it came time to finally put away the sleeper for the season, the sudden cool feel of sheets against naked feet was a forgotten thrill that made me appreciate the months of confinement all the more. 

 A magical thing, the sleeper. 

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A New Year’s Tradition

When I was a kid, New Year’s Day was the one holiday our family hosted in our house, and with it came a few annual dishes that would come to signal the holidays for me. Mushroom knishes, crab and horse chestnut appetizers, and a sweet and sour meatball stew served in a fondue pot with a stereo glowing blue beneath it to keep it warm all day – these were the holiday classics that made up my childhood. As we grew up, we hung onto most of them, changing and modifying them, and for the past several years a traditional fondue has replaced the more complicated and tie-consuming meatball stew. 

The fondue Savoyarde seen here is a simple cheese fondue, served with bread and apples, and I cook it up every New Year’s Eve, even when it’s just Andy and myself, as it was this year. It’s silly and kitschy and all the things that a holiday like New Year’s Eve/Day merits. Some sparkle, some pizzazz, some cheesiness – just the way we like things around here. Dip in. 

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The Lodge

This is The Lodge.

It is a candle, and more than that it is a frame of mind. 

In our attic it glows and scents the space with what can only be described as winter.

Pine and smoke and embers ~ the coziest portions of the slumbering season. 

It is a small consolation for the bitter cold of late, but a powerful one at that. A small light that strikes through the immensity of night. A small source of heat that cuts through the iciest edge. 

The Lodge conjured in the mind can be the one that staves off the worst of winter. It is there when we curl in on ourselves right before forcing ourselves awake and out of the warmest bed. It is there when we pull our arms tightly in front of us on the afternoon walk in the wind. It is there to save us when we slip out of our clothes and into the brief interim of brittle, unprotected air before jumping into the shower or bath. 

I like The Lodge. The candle and the idea. The light and the power. 

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Entering and Exiting with Mindfulness

I ended the last day of 2021 in the same manner in which I ended the first day of 2022: with a meditation beside the Christmas tree. Lighting a candle and stick of Palo Santo, I sunk into the deep breathing, focusing on a few key points and allowing the mind to present what it needed to present, then gradually clearing the space for stillness and emptiness, expanding the room within my mind until it was endless and empty – until all that remained was the breath and the peace. 

My meditation practice fell by the wayside as other concerns occupied life for much of 2021, and I felt its absence more keenly now that I look back on things. For that reason, I’m planning on going back to daily meditations, which makes for a calmer baseline from day to day. It’s too easy to get tense and worried when I move away from meditating for a while. 

Like its benefits, the drawbacks of not meditating aren’t felt immediately, nor are they distinct and decisive. They become noticeable with a rise in agitation and irritability, when everything at work suddenly becomes unbearable, or petty arguments suddenly seem insurmountable. As I notice those things happening, I return to meditating, and slowly the return to a place of serenity begins to happen. 

Consistency is key to reaping the maximum enjoyment and benefits from meditation, and I forgot that over the past few months. A new year is a good time to get back into good habits, and winter is when mindfulness seems to matter most. 

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Losing My Mind in a Song of Comfort

The post-holidays blues are about to hit some of us very hard, with the most depressing day of the year supposedly just around the corner (I thought it was January 6 for some reason, but my memory is not what is used to be.) For such times, it is good to find comfort in whatever makes you happy, and music has been one such source of joy for me. Here is one of those calming songs that acknowledges how rough it can be, and how crazy we can get, while delivering it in sweet and easygoing melodic fashion. It becomes a balm for all the agitated self-examination that we occasionally inflict upon ourselves. In the winter, the stillness and silence breed such reflection, and it’s not always a bad thing. 

Sometimes I feel like I’m drunk behind the wheel
The wheel of possibility
However it may roll, give it a spin
See if you can somehow factor in
You know there’s always more than one way
To say exactly what you mean to say

A good song has some element of ambiguity to it, and a few escape clauses to allow the listener to imbue it with various meanings. This is a sterling example of that, pristine in its many layers of possibility and intent, and with only a few lines. All the while, the music gently sways and pushes us along, keeping us moving through the woes of winter, reminding that there are others like us, going through the same hurt and trouble, and making the burden slightly lighter for that.  It’s perfect driving music, when the dirty snow and gray salt are wrecking the car, the pools of exhaust occasionally filtering in through the heater, and it’s both freezing and unbearably hot at the same time. 

Was I out of my head or was I out of my mind?
How could I have ever been so blind?
I was waiting for an indication, it was hard to find
Don’t matter what I say, only what I do
I never mean to do bad things to you
So quiet but I finally woke up
If you’re sad then it’s time you spoke up too

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Dazzler of the Day: Katy Perry

Having recently opened her Las Vegas residence entitled ‘Play’, Katy Perry earns her very first Dazzler of the Day here, if only for the iconic clips I’ve already seen (a piece of shit rises out of a giant toilet at one point, so… yeah). Perry has proved herself a survivor in the fickle landscape of pop, and that’s no easy feat these days. Her baby daddy Orlando Bloom is not bad to look at either

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A First Recap for the New Year

The New Year came with an early dinner with family, a return to a tradition that began from as far back as I can remember. While Thanksgiving and Christmas were always spent at the Ko house, New Year’s Day was hosted by our family. We had to skip last year’s because of COVID, but now that immediate family is all vaccinated we held it again, and I am grateful for that. It was a lovely and meaningful way to enter a new calendar year. Here’s the first recap of 2022, and within it there are several other recaps, so prepare for loads of links. 

Winter gray hair, don’t really care.

An asset to the abbey.

A Christmas jewel.

The traditional midnight wish to share with you

Most of us wanted to see 2021 go as quickly a possible, and I was no exception, so the Year in Review was kept shorter as seen in this first part and again in this last part.

Spank my New Year’s ass, baby!

I joined Twitter on January 1, 2010 – so this week marked a dozen years of wasted time there

This is still the land of confusion. [See Genesis 1986.]

A cheery mandevilla brightens my lunch

Dazzlers of the Day included Mr. M, Miranda Hart, Emily Blunt, and Tom Ellis. 

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A Mandevilla On Lunch

Lately I’ve been making the effort to take a lunch when I’m at the office, to get out and into the air, to walk and make some sort of exercise effort because this stagnation only worsens in the winter, and I don’t want to dig this rut any deeper. On a recent trip down the road, I stopped in Stacks Coffeehouse for a hot chocolate and chocolate chip cookie. (What? I can do chocolate on chocolate – hell, I’m out EXERCISING. Did a car magically transport me those 200 feet?) I sat at the counter and sipped from the warm cup, and to my left was a potted mandevilla, with a few blooms of the clearest and brightest yellow. It was such a happy sight. There, in the early days of winter, was a reminder of the glory days of summer – and sun and vacation and pool water. Outside the window was a world of grays and browns, and we haven’t even gotten to the mess that snow and salted roads have yet to bring.

The plant was doing better than other mandevilla I’ve seen indoors, thanks to its proximity against a floor-to-ceiling window pane that let all the light in. It was a glorious vision, unfurling a few graceful tendrils and showing off a couple of other blooms at various angles. As much as I wanted to rush the winter through, I paused to reflect on the beauty of the moment. While the mandevilla bloomed like it was still summer, a gray squirrel with pointy ears of white hopped across the sidewalk and leaped onto the first trunk of a stand of trees. Nimbly navigating the climb, it soared from branch to branch, higher and higher, until it began moving horizontally through the canopy, foraging in the air for what it will need to get through the winter.

I finish my cookie and the hot chocolate – a lunchtime version of what the squirrel was doing, and much sweeter in my humble opinion. Taking one last look at the mandevilla and savoring its cheerful beauty, I exit the café and head back to work. 

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Dazzler of the Day: Ryan John

Creator and overseer of Ryan’s Mean Girls, Ryan John has been making fitness into something cool and chic thanks to an effervescent spirit and consistently motivating brand of encouragement and inspiration. He earns this Dazzler of the Day for being a source of fitness empowerment coupled with fun and wit. Bonus points: his motto for the fitness program (found on this FaceBook page) is straight out of the burn book:

Not like a regular fitness page, It’s a cool fitness page.
* Don’t wear a tank top two days in a row.
* You can only wear your hair in a ponytail once a week.
* On Wednesday’s we wear pink.
* You can only wear jeans or track pants on Friday.

Your “one-stop- shop” when it comes to health and fitness. We have workouts, healthy recipes and a ton of motivation to keep you active and healthy!

We promise to help you as best we can but only YOU can make the change happen

Work hard, get fit and above all…have fun!

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Land of Confusion

I must’ve dreamed a thousand dreams
Been haunted by a million screams
But I can hear the marching feet
They’re moving into the street
Now did you read the news today?
They say the danger’s gone away
But I can see the fires still alight
They’re burning into the night

Pulling my mask a bit tighter against my face, I shuffle to the entrance of the Loudonville Price Chopper. Some guy from a dirty truck with a Trump sticker is right behind me, maskless – as he will remain (literally the only idiot not wearing a mask in the entire store) and I only wish my eyes are conveying the scowl and disgust that must remain hidden behind my own mask. Shrugging it off, because what else is there to do anymore, I listen to the song playing on the sound system, which is vaguely familiar and suddenly harkening to a childhood memory. Well, not so much a specific memory as a feeling and a place – my childhood home, a day in winter, and the flashing movements of a puppet-fueled video. It strikes some terror in my heart too, so it may have been right before we had to give a speech in sixth grade – so brutally terrifying was the notion of being in front of a group of people, even then. This is ‘Land of Confusion’ by Genesis – one of the follow-up tracks to the far superior ‘Invisible Touch’ which had informed the previous summer. (Pop music always lands better in the memory bank during the summer – I don’t know why.)

There’s too many men, too many people
Making too many problems
And not much love to go ’round
Can’t you see this is a land of confusion?
This is the world we live in (oh, oh, oh)
And these are the hands we’re given (oh, oh, oh)
Use them and let’s start trying (oh, oh, oh)
To make it a place worth living in…

The confusion of being in sixth grade – where elementary school ended and with it so much of the innocence of childhood – left me both aching to escape and longing to go back. Nobody explains adolescence to you in any effective way, and I’m not sure how we would even do that now. Happily bereft of children, I find that it’s not something that has crossed my radar. As for how I navigated through my own youth, it was a series of trials and tribulations, learning from mistakes and staying so low-key so as not to astonish or arouse suspicion. That’s strange for someone whose very characteristics set him apart from the majority of the pack. A lone wolf struggles and suffers, but if they survive they are all the stronger for it. Survival in such cases is too often a tremulous ‘if’, and I’m sorry that it had to be so.

Oh, Superman, where are you now
When everything’s gone wrong somehow?
The men of steel, the men of power
Are losing control by the hour
This is the time, this is the place
So we look for the future
But there’s not much love to go ’round
Tell me why this is a land of confusion

I didn’t really like this song, but the chorus was catchy enough to get caught in my head (damn the hook!) The video was also on constant rotation, at a time when MTV actually played music videos. Whirling and swirling, I felt the mayhem of the lyrics and the tumult of the musical cadences, all conspiring to define a moment of contained chaos.

This is the world we live in (oh, oh, oh)
And these are the hands we’re given (oh, oh, oh)
Use them and let’s start trying (oh, oh, oh)
To make it a place worth living in
I remember long ago
Oh, when the sun was shining
Yes, and the stars were bright all through the night
And the sound of your laughter as I held you tight
So long ago…

It’s not that far from where we are today, only now I’m an adult, and should be equipped for dealing with it better. Of course I’m not – the fallacy of adulthood being that children are in so many ways wiser and more reasonable. The fears I had then were only replaced by the fears I have now, and adult fears are often worse because they are of actual events rather than the made-up fantasy of imagination and what-if. Dragons are easily defeated; death not so much.

I won’t be coming home tonight
My generation will put it right
We’re not just making promises
That we know we’ll never keep
Too many men, there’s too many people
Making too many problems
And not much love to go ’round
Can’t you see this is a land of confusion?

I’m not sure what comfort or solace or resolution comes from merely pointing out the problems and identifying the existence of confusion and angst, but here it is in the hopes that something good results. Or at least nothing bad. The mere absence of awful events – the stagnant notion of nothing happening – is underrated these days. Let’s bring that back in vogue.

Now this is the world we live in (oh, oh, oh)
And these are the hands we’re given (oh, oh, oh)
Use them and let’s start trying (oh, oh, oh)
To make it a place worth fighting for
This is the world we live in (oh, oh, oh)
And these are the names we’re given (oh, oh, oh)
Stand up and let’s start showing (oh, oh, oh)
Just where our lives are going to…

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Happy Twitterversary!

It was January 1, 2010 when I joined Twitter. As far as my records indicate, my first tweet was that I’d “just joined Twitter on the advice of Martha Stewart. God help us everyone.” Back then I had maybe five or six followers, who I knew personally from real life, or at least freaking FaceBook. Looking over ridiculous Tweets from that period of time, it seems like I was a regular poster of absolute nonsense. A Jennifer Lopez critique here, a governor’s accolade there, and a mention of having ‘the Koto experience’ a restaurant ad which local movie-goers of the time will recall from the opening credits of the nearby movie theater. Cut to today, a decade plus later, when I’ve tweeted well over 100,000 times and have about 64,000 followers and a blue checkmark by my handle. What a long, strange and ever-evolving trip it’s been. There have been insults and accusations, adoration and celebration, arguments and death threats, and somehow I’ve managed to not get banned.

Social media is an elusive and untethered beast. It cannot be simply understood or manipulated, despite what most people think. The accounts that last and endure are those who are genuine and based in reality. You may not like them or agree with them, but they are the ones who refuse to be anyone other than themselves. The fakes and wanna-bes, the frauds and players, the people who hide behind a false image or entirely fabricated persona can pull off the façade for a while, but eventually they run out of space. As easy as it is for a lie to exist and be perpetuated on social media, the accounts who perpetrate such falsity eventually and always crumble. (Where is that former President who got booted anyway?) You can only hide behind a blank egg and a pretend persona for so long. And what is the point of that anyway?

If the main purpose of social media is to connect and share, to do so while coming from a place of fabrication or lies is an empty and fruitless endeavor. You can fake it for a while, but whatever you reap doesn’t mean anything because it didn’t come from a place of truth and honesty. My failings and flaws, while not exactly celebrated, were also not ignored. I didn’t pretend to be perfect, even if I acted with delusional grandiosity like I was. People see through that shit instantly. I made mistakes, I owed apologies, and I fumbled and stumbled through my social media accounts, but I was always myself.

And somehow, over the years, I garnered some like-minded followers who appreciated the silly whims and Madonna-drooling and Tom Ford regaling and shirtless male celebrity watching that went on in my online world. Whereas I could dive deep and get serious on this blog, in the brief posts and character-limits of Twitter my life was fluffy and light. It was a place where levity and brevity were the orders of the day, to keep pace with the attention-lacking flow of the modern world, darting hither and thither at break-neck pace – a Tweet on the devastation of climate change followed immediately on its heels by a Tweet on the devastating brilliance of Lady Gaga’s shoes. This smorgasbord of news and entertainment and personal life made for a Shepherd’s pie of eclectic and often-unrelated quick commentary. It meant so much and so little – the world in a single tweet that was everything and nothing at the same time. Such a silly thing when you really think about it – which is how I’ve kept it going all these years. The people who take it seriously flounder and flail, inevitably feeling the high of viral glory wane and ebb, vainly trying to capture lightning instead of just enjoying the show and letting it strike where it may. I can enjoy it for the trifling it is, because I never allowed it to be anything more than that.

Like the birdie that embodies its logo, I try to keep Twitter light and fluffy, so follow and watch me fly!

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Spank My New Year’s Ass, Baby

A branch of Eastern pine hangs over the desk on which I type this. Curving gracefully up and then down, it lends the space a rustic, natural feel, mirrored on the other end of the desk by a vase of thuja fronds. Candles glow on pedestals and in glass votives, flickering their warm light over the cozily-angled ceiling and white panel walls. A sparse Christmas tree, bedecked by an old-fashioned string of bulbous Christmas lights, emits a soft ambient light, instantly recalling holidays from childhood, reaching that far back into memory in happy, jarring fashion.

It’s a mistake to consider a single blog post as the indicator for the entire year to come, despite what I’ve professed in previous New Year’s Day entries. Still, it’s nice to set a theme or propose a tone, and with the way the world seems to be going, I’m going to put forth this manifesto for calm and peace as the aspirational goal for the new year ahead. One of the main components of manifestation is simply putting the idea into the universe – a public declaration of intent, a call of all mystical entities and spirits to help us along the journey. If we create the wish for calm and serenity, we create the place of possibility for it to exist. From there it’s just a matter of making it happen.  Seems so simple… yet for every and any intention to come to fruition, one must follow up with work and diligence and consistent upkeep. It is not enough to wish and hope, and too many entitled people think it is.

Looking back at previous New Year beginnings is proof that no matter how much I may wish for things to go a certain way, the universe will always find its own path, and it’s best to go along with the natural push and pull of things with a bit of nudging instead of hard-fast and unyielding determination. It’s good to be flexible in today’s world. Hell, after the past two years it’s become mandatory, because in too many ways we have no choice or say in the matter – the only thing we control is how we react or respond or live within a situation. There’s a certain freedom and peace when you genuinely realize that.

And so we begin another year – which in a few weeks will mark the 19thanniversary of this website. We will keep things low-key, and if we manage to make it to 20, we’ll go fucking crazy. Happy New Year!

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The Year in Semi-Review 2021: Part Two

Our Year in Review continues from this link-saturated post, and it is said that second parts should always be briefer than first parts. With that in mind here’s a condensed look-see at the second half of 2021, labeled semi because we are leaving at least half out, and all without hoopla or hubbub or H-E-double-hockey-sticks.

July 2021: in which a cardinal alights on the height of summer and memories of Andy’s roses filled the air. 

A summer song, and an imitation of life.

Summer was nothing but rain, even if the world was still standing

A rainy trip to Boston with Chris was filled with all the drama, and quite a bit more, than either of us could stand

A relatively new summer tradition found me visiting these dear friends in Connecticut

A visit from the Cape Crew brightened the rainy summer days.

An anniversary letter to my husband

August 2021: in which summer found expression in a song, or a few, and sadness found itself living within the space of summer

The light in the attic come summer

Madonna and Mandy asked the problematic question, ‘What can you lose?’

Tom Daley was obsessed with knitting

A tale of two dinners in downtown Albany.

Spending a couple of days and nights with Dad and the gentlemen Ilagan

Shakedown, 80’s style

As an antidote to the rainy Boston weekend with Chris, Suzie and I made a trip to Boston where all was sun and fun, a throwback to many an enjoyable vacation, and a welcome reminder of the importance to stay connected in such a disconnected time

A matcha made in heaven.

My birthday, and accompanying birthday suit. 

This was August, slipping away.

Two decades down, and one to go.

September 2021: in which the world finally caught a glimpse of David Beckham’s naked ass.

Entering the second half of my forties proved a quiet but beautiful sort of transition in Boston

These golden worries and this summer-ending babysitting jaunt paved the way for fall.

Dad turned 91 years old and we celebrated

The summer of 2021 proved rainy and stormy but we managed to smile our way through it

Fall arrived and with it the return of Abba and our cousin Tyler, who joined me in Boston

I survived the day it was predicted I would meet my demise. (And lived to show my ass off.)

October 2021: in which the fall fragrance was a selection by Byredo and Suzie joined me for a trip to Manchester, VT

Our annual fall adventure with the twins took place, which brought us to Manchester, and to the attic for a lesson on meditation

Nude but for an apron, as promised to the folks at Marimekko. 

Haunted by the boy who was killed for being gay.

October is when we celebrated Andy’s birthday and the anniversary of ‘Sex’ and ‘Erotica’

Mercury worked its madness and magic on a trip to Boston, which also included reunions new and old

No one talks about the way we all come home for Halloween, so we put music and words to it in this Halloween song. (Bonus: a fall visit to Connecticut!)

October 26, 2021 marked just two years of not drinking alcohol for me

November 2021: in which the quarter-century anniversary of Madonna’s turn as ‘Evita’ brings back memories that are best left forgotten. 

Taylor Swift said it all too well, and all in ten minutes. (About the length of my autumnal meditations.)

This Friendsgiving with Kira will have to suffice for the holiday stroll, until the world rights itself or at least steadies to a semi-calm state, for which we would be greatly grateful.

December 2021: in which the holly entered with the ivy, and live greens formed an integral part of a holiday tablescape.

Two queens in a king-sized bed.

The new Tom Ford Private Blend was probably the most perfect scent for reasons both personal and universal. 

A day with Dad was a pre-holiday luxury

Once upon a time I tried to be Mr. Perfectly Fine, perhaps a little too well.

The Holiday Card for 2021 was a slumber-themed subdued affair, but check out its predecessors, and prepare for a winter sleep

Keep calm and remain peaceful.

For the love of Andy’s meatballs.

Revisiting previous holiday strolls while this year’s is on hold. 

Winter has come.

A new year begins tomorrow – won’t you come back to see what’s next?

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