The Pollinators Gather

As if to say this summer is not yet over, and assembling for a party is the best way to prove it, the birds and bees and butterflies have been having a field day in our clumps of cup plants, buzzing and chirping and fluttering about their pollination work, and so our summer continues onward. Not content to throw it all away just yet, despite the wonky and rainy extended start, they seem to have congregated in the backyard as proof that the work is not yet done. This also marks the first few days of the unfurling blooms of the seven sons’ flower tree – two specimens of which now rise twenty feet in our back and side yards. 

It’s been nice having the sun back in our lives these past few days, reminding us that August and September are mostly about summer, and that the season is still high when it chooses to be. Autumn may be creeping into the nights, and the light lasts a little less every day, but it’s still summer. Hold into it…

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: Lizzo

My summer song obsession just found fruition in the latest from Lizzo, with an assist by Cardi B, and so it is that Lizzo earns her first Dazzler of the Day crowning. I admire anyone with the audacity to be themselves in the face of hate and the ills of society’s judgment. Lizzo embodies body-positivity in a world that devalues anyone who veers from the silly self-imposed standards of the mainstream. Add to that the talent and entertainment expertise of a woman just beginning to exert her power and grace, and you have the ideal Dazzler of the Day. PS – Listen to ‘Rumors’ and come back here for a proper exploration of all that ass-shaking fabulousness. 

Continue reading ...

Geranium Refreshment

Summers in Boston can be brutal. Once that heat and humidity seeps into the ground, and the subway, it simply sits there, bothering and annoying even in the midnight hour, and stubbornly lingering until October at the earliest. When the days creep into the 90’s, and the sun is not abated by cloud or tree cover, it becomes difficult to cool down, and when you’re trapped among the city blocks of concrete and cobblestone, the only relief is found within the mind. 

Such were the warm circumstances in which Suzie and I found ourselves on a recent Saturday walking along Newbury Street. To alleviate the heat, we ducked into the Aesop shop, where the temperatures were cool and the lighting was dim and everything suddenly felt tranquil and calm. So much of being hot has to do with noise and bustle, and if you can master that mental game then the world instantly becomes more comfortable. In this case we also had a big sink with cool water in which to sample their body washes and products. A fan since I purchased their delicious ‘Tacit’ fragrance, they have a number of sweetly-scented items that neither overpower nor overwhelm, and we set about to giving them a try.

Both of us are fans of geranium, which seems to originate neither from the popular annual plant that bears its common name, or the true perennial variety that blooms in subtle shades of purple. It’s a very green scent, herbal and pungent, yet soft and delicate. Cool enough to withstand the summer heat, and bright enough to dispel winter’s darkness. And so it was that I found myself with a ridiculously-pricey pair of products, all worth it in the end when I realized I could pair them so perfectly with the ‘Geranium Pour Monsieur’ fragrance by Dominique Ripion (in Frederic Malle’s exquisite line) that I had in my cologne collection. This is an ideal fragrance to use for the summer months, as it dissipated rather quickly, doesn’t rest heavily on the skin, and is light and bright enough to cut through the humidity that characterizes the muggiest days.

Continue reading ...

The Anniversary of Madonna’s Arrival

It’s been more than a hot minute since we’ve celebrated Madonna on this site, mostly because she’s reportedly been in editing mode for the long-awaited ‘Madame X Tour’ and however the hell it’s going to be presented, and her biopic, the status and form of which I’ve lost track. I’ll always be a Madonna fan, but the stand days may be done, and that’s cool. These days, I’m anxiously awaiting her next musical move, because it’s time. Her last album came out two years ago, and this is a long stretch without any musical motion on her part. Perhaps she’ll pull some amazing double-album surprise drop, but that feels like too much to wish for. In the meantime, and in honor of her birthday today, here are a few links to some online moments that celebrate the woman who’s been my main muse for the last three decades. 

Before a proper day of celebration, a good night’s sleep is important. Enjoy this ‘Bedtime Story’ to send you to dreamland.

When all else fails, and you long to be something better than you are today, I know a place where you can get away… 

I have no choice, I hear your voice.

I can dress like a boy, I can dress like a girl. Keep your beautiful words

What do I remind you of? Your past, your dreams, or some part of yourself that you just can’t love

I took a trip, it set me free – forgave myself for being me.

Sex, love, and erotica.

The face of you, my substitute for love.

Happy Birthday, Madonna ~ thanks for being there for all these years. 

Continue reading ...

A Recap Before and After Beantown

Sandwiched between my last trip to Boston with Suzie, and an upcoming birthday trip to Boston with Andy, here is a Monday morning recap that personified the very best of what August can be. Here’s all the good stuff, and then some:

Let’s begin with this year’s strangely unfabulous birthday wish list

Tom Daley, Olympic gold medalist and knitter.

A second showing of summer, led by lavender. 

A tale of two dinners in downtown Albany

The red harvest begins

A definite highlight of this summer – and this year – was this stretch of days staying with Dad

Volunteers of cheer in the form of cleome.

The happy and huge hibiscus

Shaking it down to the 80’s, with some help from my nephew Noah.

A Boston weekend with my bestie began with a spread of charcuterie, continued with a stroll in the Boston Public Garden, and concluded with a night of laughter after taking a shit on someone’s glasses

Dazzlers of the Day included Matt Iseman, Dustin Lance Black, Taika Waititi, and Grant Chungo.

Continue reading ...

Boston Weekend with the Bestie – Part 3

Most of my trips to Boston in recent years have incorporated intentional time for an afternoon siesta – when the sun, if it deigns to do so, floods the bedroom through the bay window, and the world seems to quiet for a couple of hours to recharge and rest itself for evening festivities. It’s not something that’s honored or employed much in this country, but the rest of the world understands the benefits. 

We took our afternoon break with a movie (‘The Devil Wears Prada’) and were refreshed before dinner at Oak & Rowan – a restaurant in the Seaport that looked good. The meal was stupendous, and this marked the first steps in getting to know the Seaport area a little better. It’s a bit of a trek, but nothing insurmountable on a comfortable summer evening, especially when trying to walk off a couple of days of substantial eating. The dessert we’d had was prettier than it was filling, so once again the hunt was on for a sweet treat to close the evening, and Suzie found a late-night cookie stand (Insomnia Cookies) that would do nicely in such a pinch. COVID has Boston restaurants mostly closing up before the clock strikes 11 PM, so we wandered into Downtown for this elusive cookie place, and lo and behold there it was not far from Boston Common. I’m not saying the cookies are anything more than frozen ones heated back up, slapped with some ice cream, and adequately served for anyone with the munchies – and sometimes that’s all one needs. 

We walked back to the condo skirting the Common and then the Public Garden. Suzie freaked out at a rat and a snake she claimed were battling it out by the Common, but neither me nor the two other witnesses nearby saw anything like that. Suzie can be very imaginative. We reached the condo without further incident, spent some time being harassed by Chris via text, and took our revenge on a pair of glasses he’d left on his last visit. That part will remain our little secret, and it had to be done. Life is a mysteryeveryone must stand alone

Retiring for an early start the next morning (to avoid a line at Café Madeleine and to head to the SoWa Market for the first time in two years) we slept hard again, and by the midpoint of Sunday we were ready to hit the road, hitting it just in time to avoid the lengthier traffic lines. Good music and happy company and a full tank of gas made for a seamless ride home, and our time in Boston had come to a close much too quickly. I’ve missed spending time with Suzie – one of the major drawbacks of the current state of the world – and something we will work to rectify one way or another. For now, we are eyeing a day-trip to Manchester, Vermont for the next get-together/get-away…

Continue reading ...

Boston Weekend with the Bestie – Part 2

There was already a line at Café Madeleine after our hard sleep the night before – all that walking and talking wiped us out – and I hadn’t slept so soundly in quite a long time, so we woke slightly later than intended. That meant we were without the Madeleine pastries, so we stepped into another line at Flour Bakery and just waited it out. The plan was to take a stroll through the Boston Public Garden then meander our way along Newbury Street for some shopping before a siesta and dinner. 

The Garden was filled with waterfowl and rodents – tons of ducks and geese and squirrels, all wanting to say hello to Suzie, who wanted nothing to do with them. It was already hot out, the humidity was equally oppressive, but the Garden unfolded its shady paths and cool nooks, and in the shelter of a Metasequoia tree we set up a brunch of pastries and cookies. And water – oh so much water – to combat the heat and maintain hydration. Apparently I’m drinking water and booze like a pregnant woman: tons of the former and none of the latter. 

We took our time walking through most of the Garden, staying close to the pond and beneath the trees, but even those attempts at remaining cool were proving difficult to maintain, so when we crossed Arlington to the site of the former Ritz Carlton/Taj Hotel, now The Newbury, we entered to use their air-conditioned restroom and regroup for a moment of cooling down. I’d recalled the restroom from my last trip to Boston with Chris, and their Byredo ‘Willow’ soap was the main reason for this stop. We stationed ourselves in an upstairs lobby area where they were setting up for a wedding later that day. Flowers abounded, and I was reminded of the simple joy of pausing in a hotel lobby on a day in the city and re-grouping. 

Shopping beckoned us onward, even in the midst of mounting heat and humidity, so by the time we reached the Aesop store, I was ready to stop, even if I never intended to find anything. With a soap sink and station set up for sampling their product, the dark, dim coolness of the store was a balm for the overheated madness of the street, and we took our time indulging and trying out the sweetly-scented offerings on hand. While not in the market for more soap, I splurged on their Geranium products (which is worth a total post of its own, so stay tuned…) It was one of those moments of respite that only happen when purely unplanned, on sunny days where everything else is melting, and you don’t expect to find relief so when you do it’s even more gratifying. 

We wound our way through the retail gauntlet, finding sustenance in the fries and fried pickles at Trident before returning to the condo for a siesta. Suzie proclaimed that Ahmad Jamal would provide the soundtrack to the weekend, hence the song selections in these posts. ‘Tranquility’ felt especially fitting for the laid-back calm of spending a weekend in Boston with a friend I’ve known since birth. One more post to go… 

Continue reading ...

Boston Weekend with the Bestie – Part 1

Suzie was my companion on my very last trip before COVID hit – to a ‘Swan Lake’ show in New York City in the winter before it all went awry. So returning to Boston with her felt like a return to the world of the living, even as it came with precautions and a stunning shift in what had happened to Boston, and to us, in the last year and a half. Most of our recent visits to Boston have taken place during the holidays, when winter was knocking at the door, and we were gathering friends and family for the Boston Children’s Holiday Hour. This summer trip was a return to the past for us, when we would take a few days of summer vacation to spend a couple of days in the sultry heat of Boston for some show or shopping excursion. This time around I think it was mostly to spend some quality time with each other. 

To avoid crowds, our first meal was procured largely from Eataly, where we assembled a collection of meats and cheeses and fruits and crackers for a kick-ass charcuterie platter. As I started folding pieces of salami over the side of a glass, Suzie looked at me quizzically and said it looked like I was preparing a meat cocktail. After explaining that I had seen on social media that this was how to make a salami rosette, I began to doubt myself and the end result, but after using all the salami in the pack, I flipped it over and this stunning denouement silenced all doubts. 

We had lots of leftovers for savory indulgences that would last throughout the weekend, so we stored things away and headed to the Esplanade for a summer evening walk. For far too many years, I ignored this precious place along the Charles River, and whenever friends are in town I’ve been taking them back here for a walk that feels far from the city, even as the skyscrapers loom on both sides of the water. 

We walked to Beacon Hill and made our way to Faneuil Hall where we waited in vain for someone to sell us some cookies at the Chipyard. Alas, they were already closed by the time we arrived, and so we decided to walk to the harbor to cool down a bit instead.

At the edge of the world, where sea met city, and the dark of the sky was matched by the dark of the ocean, we set up shop. The water lapped at the stone beneath our feet as we dangled them over the edge into the darkness. Boats passed in the near distance, while planes landed at Logan Airport in the far. The breeze felt good, the conversation was better, and the company was the best. 

Our search for a sweet treat to end the day ended up at the local convenience store, where some ice cream would suffice – and after a full day of walking we deserved it. Unpacking our re-entry into Boston over this dessert ended things on a sweet and satisfied note. The next day we planned to sleep in and deal with the heat of the day as it came…

Continue reading ...

Shaking It Down to the 80’s

When this song first came across the radio waves as part of the sequel to ‘Beverly Hills Cop’ I was roughly the age that my nephew Noah is now. I got to spend some quality time with him when I was staying with my Dad, and it’s fun to see how much – and how little – has changed in the lives of kids now compared to my hey-day in the 80’s. My brother and I tried to explain how far we used to ride our bikes back then – the trips to creeks across town, the roaming bands of boys traversing all of Amsterdam no matter how hot the day. The lives of boys in the summer are filled with more than anyone really realizes. 

No matter how the race is run it always ends the same
Another room without a view awaits downtown
You can shake me for a while
Live it up in style
No matter what you do I’m gonna take you down

While our main concerns seemed to be which route to take to get home quickest when we suddenly noticed the day waning, there were burgeoning worries that befuddled the mind, even in the freedom of summer. Even the sunniest day went to sleep eventually, and summer nights, without the bright blanket of snow to reflect any light, could be especially dark. In one’s youth, that dramatic hint of darkness was more of a thrill than a concern, and more often than not we found ourselves in bed before the real dark of night ever arrived. There’s a brutal lesson in patience to be gleaned from going to bed when the sun is still illuminating the sky. 

Shakedown, Breakdown, Takedown
Everybody wants into the crowded line
Breakdown, Takedown, You’re busted
Let down your guard
Honey, just about the time you’re thinkin’ it’s alright
Breakdown, Takedown, You’re busted

As I watched Noah ride his bike, toss a ball with his Dad, or jump into the pool, I was reminded of the innocence of this moment, how every minute can feel exciting and hopeful, and the next turn to dependency and despair – all over the smallest and insignificant of things – but when you’re a kid everything matters. Everything is important. Maybe that’s the big fallacy of becoming an adult – we suddenly forget about what it was like when every single thing truly mattered. 

We also lose our sense of adventure unless we keep nurturing it. The sort of summer movie escapism that characterized my childhood – even if it was only in my imagination – is rekindled mostly through things like writing this entry or remembering the chases of our youth with emboldened urgency and drama. There was never anyone really chasing us, but we felt the whole world biting at our heels and sped away because of it. 

This is a town where everyone is reachin’ for the top
This is a place where second best will never do
It’s okay to want to shine
But once you step across that line
No matter where you hide I’m comin’ after you

My niece and nephew are right in that moment, when childhood is cresting and young adulthood is right around the corner. More than any other generation perhaps, they are in a race against time – a shakedown of epic proportion that is probably quite unfair to them, but which we – the adults – have set up for them to fail. If they keep to what’s right, if they stay true to what’s good, they may stand a chance. I’m just not sure it will even matter. That’s the cynical adult in me being brutally honest. I’d rather go back to the eleven-year-old I was, dancing and grooving to ‘Shakedown’ and imagining and enacting all sorts of crazy adventures before I had to grow up.

Shakedown, Breakdown, Takedown
Everybody wants into the crowded line
Breakdown, Takedown, You’re busted
Let down your guard
Honey, just about the time you’re thinkin’ it’s alright
Breakdown, Takedown, You’re busted

Continue reading ...

Happy & Huge

Behold the Hibiscus! 

Bold, enormous, and somehow delicate, these gigantic blooms are finally putting on their annual show in the backyard, with little to no help from yours truly. Their super-late emergence typically means they get lost in the spring shuffle, and by the time their stalks appear, I’ve usually moved on to other concerns. It’s totally unfair, especially considering how well they perform, how stunning their show, and how consistent they’ve been. 

With blooms the size of dinner plates, in shades striking and soft, with foliage bright and light or sultry and dark, the Hibiscus – also hardy in Zone 5 – makes for a magnificent addition to the garden, and I may make room for a few more.

They can be shy and demure, or brash and loud, depending on the stage of their blossoms, and the colors of their petals and leaves. Such changeability and flexibility is a boon in a world that demands versatility.

 

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: Grant Chungo

There is no one who embodies the Dazzler of the Day title better than Grant Chungo, a news anchor with a penchant for the fabulous and the flair, and who unabashedly makes no apologies for being exactly who he is. That he does so in such matter-of-fact and fine form earns him this Dazzler of the Day, because sometimes there is courage and bravery simply in being who you are and not hiding or bending or pretending to be anyone else. I wasn’t always good at that, so whenever I see someone living out their authentic life, and in such a public way, it thrills me.

Continue reading ...

Volunteers of Cheer

This little stand of cleome in our front yard is what remains after a swath of volunteers popped up this year. They’ve steadily been increasing their numbers in the very-limited space of our front square, and this year I did a drastic editing of their army, allowing these few to prosper and grow. 

They start out deceptively small – both the actual plant itself, as well as the blooms. The latter begins in shades of pink and cream, just a small little puff of petals at the top, and then it begins to elongate and fill out until a large pom-pom of floriferous wonder sets atop a three-foot stem. The lower stems start going to seed before they even finish the flowering at the top, creating a fascinating display of the full life cycle at one glance. 

I’ll let these sew next year’s volunteers because it’s good to have such color at this time of the year. 

Continue reading ...

The Gentlemen Ilagan

When Mom asked if I would stay with Dad while she went to Boston with my niece, I was a little apprehensive. At the age of 90, my Dad has slowed down considerably, and often has trouble sleeping through the night, so I wasn’t sure I could handle it safely. So great was my concern that I enlisted the help of my brother to spend the two nights, figuring between the two of us, we could monitor Dad and keep things running until Mom returned. And so it was early on a Monday morning, before my telecommuting work day began, I arrived in Amsterdam and saw Mom and Emi off, then settled into Dad care, which would turn out to be better than anyone, especially myself, had imagined. 

For once, the weather cooperated – and the three days we spent together found summer at a comfortable high – sunny but not overbearingly hot or humid. The gardens were in bloom – hydrangeas and lilies and coreopsis and butterfly bushes. Bushels of tomatoes spilled fruit over their buckets while pots of impatiens and geraniums lit up every corner of the patio. 

Dad was in good spirits, and sharper than he’d been in recent months. I’d made a big batch of pancit for our stay, and plated some up for our first lunch together. Together with some apple juice, he ate pretty well, and I relaxed into the day. When work was done, I began the power-washing of their pool deck, which hadn’t seen such a cleaning in three decades. Noah arrived then, and I showed him how to do it. He did a small corner and called it a day. 

At regular intervals, I’d set Dad up with his exercise machine – a foot pedal thing that allows him to pedal as if on a stationary bike, but from the comfy seat of his couch. The older we get, the more important it is to stay in motion, to keep the exercise up, and to remain as mobile and flexible as possible. Dad taught me that as a young child, when I’d tumble into their bed early in the morning – he’d go through a set of leg exercises while still in bed to limber his body up for the day ahead. Such stretches seemed silly and rudimentary at the time, but they’ve led to 90 years of walking, so I hope he remembers to continue. 

We had some adobo that Mom had left for dinner, and I made sure Dad got this pills for the evening before setting up his outfit for the next day. A man of ritual and tradition, and a Virgo like myself, he does best when there is structure and organization to the day. I did my best to make sure his habits were in place with the list of instructions from Mom. 

That first night, we kept him up past 8 PM, which is late for him, and I’d hoped it would allow him to sleep through the night. We cajoled him into watching some of the Olympics, then he headed up to bed. An hour or so later, I went upstairs to my childhood bedroom and settled uneasily into the bottom of a bunk bed that seemed to be missing a slat or two, where I spent a restless night worried and waking to the slightest noise. It turned out to be worry for naught. Dad slept through until about 6:30 AM, when he opened the door to check on me and I said I’d be down to get breakfast in a minute. 

The next day passed in similar fashion, and when 4 PM arrived I shut down the work computer, finished the power washing of the pool deck, and took a dip in the pool with Noah. (I promised if he did a little more power-washing I would join him.) I gave Dad his dinner, and set him up with his evening pills, and he repeated his regular question and confirmation of where Mom was and when she was returning. If the worst that happened was some repetition and confusion, I could consider it a success. That these few days offered some precious quality time with my father was a bonus that I didn’t expect, or understand how much I needed. 

Being under the same roof with my Dad, my brother, and my nephew was something that hadn’t happened in years, and it felt as wonderful and strange as it did happy and right. 

Continue reading ...

A Red Harvest

The San Marzano tomato plant I tried for the first time this year resulted in nothing but rotten fruit and the scariest caterpillars I’ve ever encountered, so that poor specimen has been dismantled. The cherry tomatoes, however, have done as well as they typically do – as has a Big Boy that snuck into the patch. All are coming into fruition this month, and it’s a scarlet celebration in our kitchen.

There’s a thrill to wandering about the patio, spying a ripe cherry tomato, and simply popping it into my mouth, where it explodes in a sweet and tart party on the tongue. 

Continue reading ...

Dazzler of the Day: Taika Waititi

Suzie took a recent photo of me and all the gray in my hair pushed her to declare Taika Waititi my current doppelgänger. At first I argued, then looked at him online and she may be right. Poor guy – I’m throwing him a bone by crowning him as Dazzler of the Day. He’s more than earned it, thanks to his excellence as director, writer, actor, producer and comedian. While most declare his direction of ‘Thor: Ragnarok’ his crowning accomplishment thus far, it’s the exquisitely powerful ‘Jojo Rabbit’ that most enthralled me. Looking forward to seeing ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ with Skip next year.

Continue reading ...