Winter Floating

“When you are young, there are many things which appear dull and lifeless. But as you get older, you will find these are the very things that are most important to you.” ~ Kazuo Ishiguro, An Artist of the Floating World

The works of Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai are some of the most famous art pieces in the world, especially his renditions of Mount Fuji and all those glorious waves. Hokusai has also painted a number of snow-themed works, to which I often turn at this time of the year, trying to find beauty in the predicament that is winter in upstate New York. I’ll curl up in a cozy corner of the conversation couch, backed by the light from the front window, and delve into my art books, slowly turning the pages and marveling at the work of a masterful artist, and the way it mirrors the wintry scene just beyond my reach. 

“There is certainly a satisfaction and dignity to be gained in coming to terms with the mistakes one has made in the course of one’s life.” ~ Kazuo Ishiguro, An Artist of the Floating World

The notion of the Floating World, where we find our worldly pleasures in and of the moment, is especially resonant in these winter months, when joy is fleeting and the ephemeral thrills slip way before they can be fully felt. I want to embrace winter, I want to inhale its smoky chill and inhabit its icy beauty, and I’m getting closer to achieving this. The love of such a trying season has been a long time coming, and it’s one that took some work and effort to approach. There aren’t many people I know who prefer the rigors of winter to the ease of summer, and those that do remind me that our world is a wonderfully varied and vibrant place, with people as different as night and day. How fortunate we are to be in such a world, for however brief a moment.

“A man who aspires to rise above the mediocre, to be something more than the ordinary, surely deserves admiration, even if he fails and loses a fortune on account of his ambitions…
If one has failed only where others have not had the courage or will to try, there is consolation – indeed, deep satisfaction – to be gained from his observation when looking back over one’s life.” ~ Kazuo Ishiguro, An Artist of the Floating World

Continue reading ...

Approaching Spirituality, Always

“Spirituality dawns when individuality vanishes. When our ego becomes aware of something that is higher than it – the individual Spirit, or Soul; then spirituality dawns.” ~ Swami Rama

One of the best realizations in recent years has been understanding that my entire life will only ever be a state of barely approaching some sort of enlightenment or spirituality. For a previous-perfectionist, that’s not a simple statement to make, or an easy acknowledgment to admit, yet it’s been one of the greatest things for helping me evolve into someone a little kinder, and a little more understanding. As someone who enjoys a challenge, it also inspires me to push against years of socially-conditioned behavior, even as I thought I was going against everything. A little bit of humility goes a long way, and admitting your failings and flaws is the absolute best way to improve, or simply accept who you are. Sometimes, the worst things we think of ourselves aren’t really bad at all – they tend to be more about perception and inner-analysis. Letting go of that is another step closer to finding peace, or spirituality.

That’s the other idea I’ve been slowly coming to understand: whatever name you assign to it – spirituality, inner-peace, calm, tranquility, mindfulness, centeredness – it’s all the same thing. It is, at its heart, a connection of the soul to the universe. Finding that place – our place – while we are on this earth, is the journey we are all making, whether we realize it or not. I’ve only just begun, and it is challenging, rewarding, and enlightening work. 

Continue reading ...

Summer Pining

Outside the window, a pine tree holds a heavy bouquet of ice and snow and sleet – the same awful mix that coats the driveway, which I will shovel up one single stroke at a time, as that is all I can lift. This, of course, is winter in Albany, New York – the season that makes us all question our sanity for staying here, but that makes the spring and summer so much the sweeter. And so the mind wanders… back a few months, or forward a few… whichever brings us closer to summer weather… and into this Calvin Harris vibe.

Perfect for poolside lounging – nothing too heavy on the ears or the mind – the music shuffles a little languidly, the way the water sometimes feels lazy, like it can barely exert itself to make any waves. All those little summer moments that seemed so insignificant and so precious now that they are behind us… and will we do anything next summer to embrace them any more? We promise we will, but I won’t count on it. Summer spoils us that way. 

Perhaps we make it up in the winter – perhaps we can only show our love and appreciation when the object of our affection is far away and removed. The insufferable conundrum of being such flawed creatures – we totally miss loving summer when it’s with us. 

I hold it in my heart now – its sounds and songs and scents, its turns and twists and twilights, its fun and sun and buns – as much as I try to hold winter in my heart while we are in it. 

 

 

Continue reading ...

The Freshest Green In A Flower

Is it strange that the freshest green of the season is to be found in the flower rather than leaves of this amaryllis? If so, it’s a strangeness that is as gorgeous and beautiful as it is mind-pondering. It’s taken me many years to find the exquisite beauty of cream and light green flowers – for so Lon I considered them a waste of floral splendor. What’s the point of putting all your time and effort into a bloom that is the same color as a leaf? I’ve spent the last few years making up for that error, indulging in bouquets that are monochromatically cream and green, as gentle and easy on the eyes as they are simple to assemble. Sometimes a single bloom, when it’s as spectacular as this amaryllis, is all that you need. 

Our home is due for another bouquet, to stave off the winter, to make the days bearable. 

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: Quentin Maxfield

Being in the middle of a cartoon threesome was, strangely enough, not on any of my bucket lists, but after gleefully discovering the artwork of Quentin Maxfield and being immortalized in one of his erotic scenes, it most certainly should have been. (This is also the closest I’ll get to becoming Jessica Rabbit, and I must take such thrills where I can get them.) The admittedly NSFW/18+only artwork is a glorious amalgamation of animation and real-life photographs, as Maxfield brilliantly combines the two in breathtaking fashion. Beginning with a photograph and wondrously weaving a sexy scenario around it in cartoon form, he creates a scene that elevates a real life pose into the realm of fantasy.

Maxfield’s work is a mash-up of erotic fusion and whimsy, grounded in a skillful rendering of light and shadows: his genius lies partly in his ability to match his additions to the photograph in lighting, tone, and texture, creating a seamless world where a real life image is augmented by animated figures in sexy, surreal style – a heightened landscape of erotic drama. Check out his Instagram and Twitter feeds for more NSFW artwork and scintillating evidence on why he has been named Dazzler of the Day. I can’t wait to see what he conjures next. 

Continue reading ...

A Madonna Celebration Four Decades in the Making

When Madonna canceled her Boston dates on her last tour, I was crestfallen, but not heartbroken. I’d seen her multiple times prior to that, so it wasn’t the end of the world. It did, however, mark the start of a litany of canceled shows that followed in the arrival of the COVID pandemic, and left a foul taste in the mouth, even as my bank account got replenished in unexpected refunds. 

Now Madonna has announced a new tour – The Celebration Tour – billed as a greatest hits concert culled from the past forty years of her history-making/shaking career. At first I balked at the price of tickets, then I balked at the emotional investment in the event that things get canceled or called off, and finally I balked at my hesitation: this is Madonna. Singing her hits. For what might be the very last time. 

When my friend LeeMichael (no stranger to momentous theatrical events) told me he got tickets in the pre-sale and would be happy to go with me, I talked it over with Andy and accepted (Andy being thrilled not to deal with the stressful ticket-procurement process or the attached price tag). So come August I will hopefully be attending Madonna’s Celebration Tour. In anticipation of that, and in the spirit of such things, here is my dream set-list, as every proper fan is currently formulating one in their head. It’s a little ambitious, but Madonna on tour is Madonna at her most ambitious. (And do click on the links for the Madonna Timeline entries that have been written so far.)

 

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: Casey Stratton

It was 19 years ago today that Casey Stratton released one of those albums that changed my life in the way that it conveyed exactly what I was thinking and feeling, even before I understood it all myself, in his pivotal work ‘Standing At The Edge’. Since then, I’ve been a fan of his music (he’s recorded 29 albums so far), and the way it has been his constant companion over the past two decades. In honor of this special anniversary, Stratton is crowned as Dazzler of the Day – for all the art he continues to create, and all the souls he has already touched through his work. Check out his website here for more music and beauty. 

Continue reading ...

A Smoke-Addled Boulevard of Broken Dreams

It was a brutal winter’s night. Fragile but brutal. There was ice dangling in the air, too cold to drip. Smoke curling from the only glow in that darkness – the lit end of a cigarette, because we were smoking the hurt away. We dismissed our concerns with a flick of fingers and a sentiment cribbed from ‘Cabaret’: divine decadence. The wave goodbye, over the shoulders, was even less than the efforts that the wisp of a silk scarf made. We were young then, careless with our hearts, and, so much worse, careless with the hearts of others. We did it to make it through the winter. If there was warmth to be found in that decadence – in the burn of a cocktail, in the embers of a cigarette, in the arms of a stranger – I don’t think I found it. The traces of it, the echoes of it, the hints and peeks and dusty remnants of it – they never added up to anything more than a want or a wish, and as much as I wanted them to come together in something of substance, they disappeared like the smoke from my mouth, all too quickly melting into whatever formed the black night air of that winter. 

Who better than Marianne Faithfull to give voice and music to such a night? Who better to give voice to such a winter?

In the weeks leading up to Valentine’s Day, I would visit my friends at Cornell. Suzie was a fellow cynic when it came to love, perhaps even more acerbic at times than me. My broken heart’s club wasn’t assembled because the men fucked us over – it’s because the men never fucked us at all. Not the kind of fucking that was on my wish list. I wanted it all – and the men I knew then could only provide bits and pieces of it. 

And so that winter was populated by the boozy, smoky nights where we found solace in approximating the divine decadence of someone like Sally Bowles – a creature as lost as we often felt, encased in her tattered fashion and solitary style. I listened to Marianne Faithfull, whose voice was the embodiment of smoke itself, and the desperation of winter.

Fall burned in a way that winter never would. 

Continue reading ...

Make-Up Weekend in Boston ~ 2

My favorite museum in the whole world (sorry, State Hermitage) is easy the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, famed as much for its founding lady as it now is for its infamous theft. Both proved of interest to the twins, so I spent the few days prior to our visit preparing them with the story of that heist, in the hopes that some of the beauty, art, and story of Gardner herself would come along with it. 

I still remember my first time at the museum. It was on a bitterly cold day in winter, and it would have been just a few short years after the crime. As her will decreed that nothing in the museum should be changed or moved, the empty frames remained empty – ghostly reminders of the robbery and the questionable avarice of human beings. I remember being more struck by them than my much of the painting that remained – a sad comment on humanity all around. 

Emi and Noah took it all in – Noah had researched where the rooms with the missing paintings were located, and we went through each with meticulous and careful examination; Noah took photos along the way, including the above one of Emi and myself by the courtyard. 

This remains my favorite place in the museum, no matter how obvious it might be. There is such a sense of peace and tranquility that steals over anyone caught in its spell – it is utterly transporting, especially on a January day in Boston that would sputter a mix of rain and snow for its entire duration, compelling us indoors and draining the joy of a walk in the city. The twins asked if we could visit the neighboring Museum of Fine Arts on some future visit and I said we absolutely could. 

After a lunch at Eataly and some shopping along Newbury, we found a respite in the early but already dim afternoon within the marble brilliance of the Fairmont Copley Plaza. During out pause there we discussed the day so far, along with plans for the remainder of the evening, which would find us seeking out a bowl of pho at a sub-par place that was disappointing for a first pho, so I promised to bring them to a more worthy spot before the winter ends. 

Back at the condo for the evening, we decided against a movie, and I taught them the game of chess, which they both picked up much more quickly than I remember picking it up. While my friend Billy first taught me how to play, it was my Uncle Roberto who honed my skills and made me into a fierce contender. It felt only right to carry on that tradition in the role of Uncle I now occupy, and I was happy to see their skills improve before my eyes as they held their own against my own arsenal of experience. They will make formidable chess foes in the very near future. 

All in all, it was a fun and surprisingly educational experience, and I realized that I may connect best to the pre-teen/early-teen age demographic, perhaps because that’s where my head still resides. They went to bed beneath a  rainbow of taffeta curtains I had just taken down from the holiday decorations, because that’s how Uncle Al rolls. 

The next morning we decided on brunch at Boston Chops, then made our reluctant return home. All winter weekends should be so lovely.

Continue reading ...

Make-Up Weekend in Boston ~ 1

By the time we arrived in Boston on a Friday evening in January, it was already dark. Our playlists had all been played, and there was one last visitor’s spot left for parking on our street – a happy sign that we were right where we were meant to be. We grabbed our bags and hoofed it to the condo, where I adjusted the thermostat to something cozy, and we settled in to the warmth and the light of the space

This was our make-up weekend for having missed out on this holiday gathering, and as I switched on some Christmas lights and lit a few cinnamon-scented candles, I vowed to make this our official last holiday act of the year. The twins set about to opening their gift bags, which had a moviwe for later, and some silly treats for then. I sat down and took a deep breath, then looked for some dinner options. 

As with most decisions these days, dinner was a negotiation between the twins – with strict parameters and compromises, lines of demarcation and concessions, and the sort of trade-offs one would usually expect from countries who had been at war for centuries. I just wanted some warm food, and as soon as possible. They finally settled on the South End Buttery, to which we hustled in hurried and hungry form. The cozy little corner restaurant welcomed us in from the cold, and we soon enjoyed a dinner and went over the plans for the following day.

On the way home, and in search of a sweet treat, we took a detour to the Newbury Hotel, site of a glorious hot fudge brownie sundae the last few times I’d been in town, so I brought them there for our sugary night cap. The sundae was on the menu, so we each ordered one. It would be a weekend of splurging and indulgence, and it had only begun… 

Continue reading ...

Winter’s Magical Light

The light at this time of the year isn’t always magical or wondrous. Mostly it is gray and dull and muted – the sky mirroring the salty, sanded streets, and the blush off the rose of snow. Some days, though, it reveals a golden glow that only shows itself just before the sun goes down, on the needles of evergreens, and the bare branches of distant oaks and maples. It is a reminder that there is still life going on during these long and arduous weeks of winter.

Here is where I find the way through the rest of January – in the glimpses of sunlight that grow a little longer with each passing day. We move a little closer to spring – sometimes I can sense it in the air of a minor thaw, or the disappearance of holiday items from the stores. Soon, there will be a box of Cadbury creme eggs heralding the impending drama of Easter. Rather than going stir-crazy, I will embrace the slow roll, and do my best to find the beauty in every day, no matter how gray. 

Mercury has moved out of retrograde motion, perhaps allowing a bit of peace and quiet after its torturous tumult of the past few weeks. The time has come for winter calm – and winter light.

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: My Mom

This is probably my favorite Dazzler of the Day since my Dad was featured and my husband Andy was crowned a couple of years ago. This is my Mom, Laurie, who gets named as Dazzler for being, well, my Mom. While we extolled her more meaningful virtues in this earlier post, this one is all about her sense of style. Any talent I may have at putting together an outfit was created, cultivated and honed by my mother. She would set out a selection of three outfits for me to chose for school the next day, subtly teaching me how to put a wardrobe together – what matched and didn’t, what worked well together, and what sort of things would be best for accessories. My springboard into fashion was launched by regular perusing of her jewelry drawer, her scarf drawer, and the rows of shoes found in her closets. I would marvel at the way she could go from beleaguered housewife-in-a-flannel-nightgown and slippers to a Sunday stunner at church in the matter of an hour or so. “My mother taught me to be admired” as a wise woman once said, and that has proven true in more ways than I can mention. Today, on her birthday, we celebrate my Mom’s style – elegant and classic and timeless – and always dazzling. 

Continue reading ...

Lola’s Birthday

Like many families, ours has decidedly been structured around a matriarchal tradition: my mother has been the central figure who has largely held our family together throughout my entire life. From my first moments of mental recognition, I saw that our mother was the person who really ran things in our home. Dad may have gone out to work every day and doled out discipline when we got out of hand, but I saw and understood that the real person in charge was Mom. As such, I never doubted or had any society-skewed view of gender roles in our home. I viewed my parents largely as equals, and if anything the strength and power and charge of our family resided in Mom. If I have any decent recognition of the equality among genders, it’s due to my Mom’s example. 

She taught me and my brother many things over the years, molding us into the people we would become, teaching us a certain grace and unassuming humility, mostly because we never saw her engage in ugliness or confrontations or judgment. She took the best of her Catholic faith and lived it rather than preaching or talking about it. Her work as a nurse and later a professor of nursing showed me how we could help others – not by shouting about it or heralding her own efforts, but simply by doing. 

It’s a tradition that continues to this day, as she takes care of my father in his advancing age and medical condition, as well as her three grandchildren, to whom she is affectionately known as ‘Lola’. Her two sons are also still largely dependent on her for guidance and strength, as we find our own way as adults. This is her birthday, and while she deserves this sort of recognition every day, I’m putting it into print here to honor her in the only way that I can. 

Happy birthday, Mom – we love you!

Continue reading ...

Tracing the Lines of Time

Twenty years ago, this website was having its soft-opening, which means that this March will mark the official 20th anniversary of ALANILAGAN.com. For a personal website, that’s a long-ass run – hell, for any kind of website that’s a long-ass run, and while I may seem to celebrate myself here on the daily, this one is worthy of note. To that end, I’ll be working on some 20th anniversary celebrations leading up and into March. 

A lot happens in 20 years. Look at my hair here – not a wisp of gray on the horizon. Not a wrinkle or laugh line or furrowed brow. And not a clue about that ridiculous goatee. The glory and ignorance of youth! I wouldn’t trade or alter any of it, nor would I want to go through it all again. 

My niece asked me that the other day – whether I’d go back and change anything. I answered that for the most part, no, as that might change any number of possible outcomes that led me to where I am today. Most people would give that stock answer, and while allowing for some caveats, it’s mostly true for me as well. The one thing I did add was that I don’t think I’d want to go through it all again. Not because I didn’t have moments of elation and enjoyment, but because at this particular moment I feel the weight and the work and the drudgery of those years, as much as I feel the accomplishments and happiness that have come along with it. She may have caught me at a moment of weakness and exhaustion. 

For now, I take a deep breath and let it out slowly, determined to carry on with this website in its 20th year, determined to keep it as a diary and repository of creative work, determined to move forward and find a way closer to truth and beauty – and determined to make it through another winter. Do join me – it’s so much friendlier with two. 

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: Paul Mescal

He just joined Richard Linklater’s 20-year production of ‘Merrily We Roll Along’, and with that added bit of sparkle, Paul Mescal earns his first crowning as Dazzler of the Day. Having compiled an impressive roster of stage performances in his native Ireland, Mescal has been garnering critical praise for his dramatic work in films such as ‘The Lost Daughter’, ”Aftersun’ and ‘God’s Creatures’. And so he rolls merrily along… 

Continue reading ...