Back in Boston, Proper

This year’s return to our annual BroSox Adventure originally looked a little different than previous years. We are, after all, still muddling through a pandemic in which certain idiots are still refusing to get vaccinated, and the rest of us are being forced to carry the responsibility and concern for our fellow human beings. Luckily, New York and Massachusetts are both doing well on those fronts, and the last time I was in Boston they were just opening things up to full capacity, with no masks for those of us who are fully vaccinated. That includes Red Sox games, which changes our original plans for the BroSox Adventure with Skip. 

We had planned on simply taking in a game from afar – either at some quiet pub or restaurant, and possibly just in our hotel room at the Mandarin Oriental – but someplace low-key and, frankly, affordable. When they opened up Fenway to full capacity, however, tickets suddenly became available, and Skip managed to scoop some up, enabling us to return to our tradition in all its customary form. As Skip put it, a BroSox Adventure without a trip to baseballs cathedral would somehow ring hollow – especially after being absent for over a year. This feels right, and it adds the finishing touch to a trip that we’ve been hoping to happen for two years. 

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Dreaming of the Itoh Peony

Behold! The glory and the mesmerizing beauty of the Itoh peony. I’ve been looking for a specimen to put on display here, as the tree peony we currently have is one of those heavy-headed varieties which gets so top heavy each bloom requires staking, and I’m not into that kind of maintenance. 

The exquisite form of the tree peony has long charmed me, and I’m not sure why it’s taken so long to come around to trying my hand at them again. Their reputation of being finicky an difficult to transplant has already been upended here – the one we have was moved twice and still flowers. The foliage also tends to stay perfectly intact and unmarred by mildew, unlike their herbaceous cousins, which don’t fare that well in the humid summers we usually have. 

The Itoh peony is actually a hybrid of an herbaceous peony and a tree peony, and reportedly combines the best qualities of both. I’m working on finding the perfect placement for such a beauty… 

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Dazzler of the Day: Ellen DeGeneres

The announcement sent shockwaves through the entertainment industry: Ellen DeGeneres was ending her wildly popular television show after nineteen years of entertaining and giving her unique gift of humor, wit, and kindness to a world that wasn’t always appreciative of it. Her very public coming-out in the 90’s (that ‘Time’ magazine cover story and bold proclamation of ‘Yep, I’m gay!’ was a formative part of my own coming out – and likely countless others) was as celebrated as it was momentous. It moved the cultural stigma that was still afflicting the world, even as it seemingly harmed her sitcom career. The courage it took to do that should not be underestimated or forgotten, and if that was all she ever did she would have left an impressive legacy. Luckily for us, that was only the beginning, and she has since go on to host some of the biggest entertainment gigs that exist, and then establishing a hit show that put the LGBTQIA community on full, unfussy display every week-day. There was glory in that, and it’s something that we will all miss. She earns her first Dazzler of the Day in the hopes that she embarks on the next chapter of her journey with all the hilarious gusto and dazzle she’s given us so far. 

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Love Thy Neighbor

When I first heard that my pals LeeMichael and Bryan had been harassed with homophobic mailings for the last five years in their hometown of Milton, MA, I was doubly incensed. First of all, the fact that homophobia is still a thing is reprehensible on its own. Second, that it was done via abuse of the postal service is diabolical. I have a special place in my heart for the US Postal Service (as LeeMichael circa 1997 will attest) and I absolutely abhor anyone who abuses such an agency for nefarious purposes. 

For all the horrors and fears stoked by such harassment, and for all five years of living in such worry, this story has a very happy ending, and not only because they caught the individual responsible. Bryan summed up the experience like this:

I am so very excited to announce that LeeMichael and I are announcing a fundraiser for our local Gay Straight Alliance in the high school and middle school. As some of you know, our family faced many years of harassment via mail from an individual that would subscribe for magazines and services with offensive and homophobic names directed to our address. This was a time of apprehension and sadness for our family. This year, after a hiatus, the individual again signed us up or a subscription under the name Michelle Fruitzey. For the first time, we were able to get a handwriting sample. Our town as a community and with the help of the local police was able to identify the perpetrator and arrest him for years of criminal harassment. Our family decided to turn a bad situation into a great situation by “owning” the name Michelle Fruitzey and having a fundraiser for the local GSA in our town schools by selling t-shirts. Let’s educate against bullying in all forms, especially against GLBT youth… You can also order t-shirts to support our cause at https://fundly.com/iammichellefruitzey. We are so very grateful to the Town of Milton and our many friends and neighbors that provided us so much support. Thank you!

A more in-depth article on the whole saga is here, while you can purchase the t-shirts directly at this link. In this month of Pride, it warms my heart to see that some neighbors still care, and that people, at their best, will always work to help and protect one another. 

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The Summer Place to Be: Scandi Attic Loft

“Somebody has to go polish the stars,
They’re looking a little bit dull.
Somebody has to go polish the stars,
For the eagles and starlings and gulls
Have all been complaining they’re tarnished and worn,
They say they want new ones we cannot afford.
So please get your rags
And your polishing jars,
Somebody has to go polish the stars.”
~ Shel Silverstein, A Light in the Attic

When we first purchased our home, there was a little attic/loft area which once functioned as a children’s play space, at least judging from the writing in the closets. On the floor was a dark, glued-down industrial ‘carpet’ that was like black and blue astroturf. It looked awful and smelled even worse. I scraped it off – by hand – then sanded it down – by machine – and painted it all white (paneling, floors, and ceiling). Since it was still rough around the edges, the easiest style to conjure was a shabby chic hybrid – and twenty years ago it was all the rage. 

I hung floral curtains to mask an ugly metal divider gate, whitewashed shelves for decorative purposes, and raided the Marshall’s shabby chic section to fill it with fringed monstrosities. It served its simple purpose as a surplus room for guests, but eventually we stopped bothering to keep it up. It went unheated in the winter and un-air-conditioned in the summer, so it was mostly uninhabitable. 

What began as a shabby chic attic evolved into a messy and practically unlivable storage space as time passed and we focused on other parts of the house. So bad did my clutter get that mere walking was often a menace, and navigating the piles of stuff was an exercise right out of ‘Hoarders: Buried Alive’. Reclaiming it from ‘Grey Gardens’ territory took a lot of garbage bags and some ruthless editing, but I spent the earliest weeks of spring making it happen, just as the sun began to heat the room nicely. This was a serious sort of spring cleaning – more than dusting or shifting clothes. It was designed to aid in our storage issues, and to create a bit more space for us. The work began on the staircase, where we had been lining each stair with bottles of soda and seltzer, then spilling it into the space above the stairs, with bags of coffee beans, kitchen items, holiday decor, and things like a fryer, an ice cream maker, and a waffle maker. You know, the shit that gets used twice a year, and only if people are coming over.

Once a little space was cleared, and the place could breathe again, inspiration built on itself. I was rapidly filling 55-gallon garbage bags with the unused detritus and nonsense of two decades of impulse buying. A few items I managed to sell on FaceBook Marketplace, which would provide funding for the slight change-up in style I had in mind. 

After obsessing over the concept of hygge over this past winter, I wanted a similar spirit to infuse this attic loft for summer, so I turned to a Scandinavian slant, giving in to a white-washed brightness tempered with some natural wood and ivory shell inlaid work. 

Influences and accents of Scandinavian style and mid-century simplicity injected the room with a calming atmosphere – a bright, livable space just in time for the summer season – and the summer guests

Andy’s antique wooden bed-frame reclaims pride-of-place in the center of it all, shifting the purpose and intent to one of repose and relaxation. It turned out so well I may entertain an office move to this area at some point. I’ve already taken to napping here in the afternoon. 

Cue the background music for the rest of the tour…

A new sound-system designed like a mid-century radio allows for music to inhabit the place, immediately bringing new life and energy into a room that had previously stayed largely quiet. (You can see it on the right side of the desk below – unobtrusively elegant in a slightly retro way.)

The multitude of lamps are a necessity because there is only one small window to light the expanse – and half of that is taken up by an AC unit in the summer. While that one East-facing portal allows some morning into the space, it’s not nearly enough for the bright and airy feel I was going for, so lamps abound. That makes this the ideal space for rainy days as well, when you can hear the pitter-patter of raindrops on the roof, lending it a coziness unparalleled elsewhere in the house. 

Along with Andy’s bed, my grandmother’s old chest – a hand-painted piece of wooden craftsmanship – adds some love and nostalgia, warming the white and cream environs, and grounding its corner with a necessary element of dark wood. 

Almost twenty years into this home, it’s a welcome bit of enchantment to find that there are still places to surprise and thrill, repurposing themselves into a new addition that costs only as much as a bucket of paint and some new lamps and such. I’ve got some more pictures to hang, and a few more accent pieces to find, but this is already perfect for guests to visit. Here’s one more song to welcome summer:

“How much good inside a day? Depends how good you live ’em. How much love inside a friend? Depends on how much you give ’em.” ~ Shel Silverstein, A Light in the Attic

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Pride Month 2021

What a wonderful circumstance to realize that Pride Month has reached such saturation in mainstream media that it rivals Christmas in all the best and worst ways. I’m not going to get into a critique of corporate tie-ins and the whole lavender-washing of a movement that was rooted in the Stonewall Riots of 1969. We’ve come a long way to see rainbow flags on Target merchandise, and I’m not about to decry or condemn the rest of the world for catching up and wanting to celebrate too. 

Rather, I’m going to focus on the true meaning of Pride, much in the way that I’ve come to focus on the true meaning of Christmas – the essence of this month in which we remember our past, celebrate our present, and look to make things better for the future. For me, Pride will always be about one simple image: two guys walking down Boylston Street in Boston holding hands, unconcerned about the world around them, and simply enjoying the touch of another human being. I saw it at one of the first Pride Marches I ever attended, and it still thrills me – because I remember

I remember what a thrill that was because it was something I didn’t grow up seeing. 

I remember growing up and not having any sense of the possibility of love – not the love I was created to experience, not the love I was born to live. I remember the sort of heterosexual love that was forced upon me, and that I forced myself to fit into, even when it felt wrong, even when I knew it wasn’t me. 

I remember not seeing myself anywhere, not finding my future on television or in a magazine or a movie. 

Because I remember those things, and so many more, I will still celebrate Pride.

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The May-Ending Recap

What a wild week it has been – with the Super Flower Blood Moon and Mercury shifting into retrograde motion, all the drama should have been expected, and luckily it was. Fortifying myself against such winds is the best form of protection in which to engage, and preventative measures are always easier than reparative ones. I can honestly say I did my best, even when the weather tried its best to bring us all down. On with the recap, and the unofficial start to summer that today’s holiday heralds. 

Hints of our upcoming BroSox Adventure – and a big splashy return to Beantown – were kept largely low-key and under-hyped so as not to get ahead of ourselves. 

The Korean lilac in all its splendor and sweet perfume

An infamous Super Flower Blood Moon spread its power and might over the night. 

Basic floral vibrance

All roads lead to summer

A lane of Lindens in downtown Albany

Rhody rendezvous.

Telling stories at bedtime.

Season of the Chinese dogwood.

A trippy return of the Madonna Timeline with ‘Bedtime Story’.

Sunset calla.

Boston misadventures: Part One, Part Two, and Part Three.

Dazzlers of the Day included Troye Sivan, P!nk, John Cho, Benita Zahn, and Ben Cohen.

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Boston Misadventures – Part 3

Shaking off the ickiness of an awkward and difficult lunch is only partly cured by a shopping excursion. That sort of balm requires beauty and flowers and the sweetness of a slow sun setting over the city which has never let me down. To those ends, Boston delivered a calming end to the day, as if to say that everything was going to be all right, everything was as it should be, and it was ok to simply pause and breathe and exist. 

Summer would come to Boston, just as spring had done, and there was no stopping or changing that. The upcoming BroSox Adventure with Skip is on the near horizon, while a birthday celebration in Boston with Andy is further down summer’s road. I’ll also be spending some time on my own in the city, like I used to do when Kira was in Florida. I’ve missed such solitude. We have all missed so much. 

It is enough to exist, to breathe, to simply be – and we need not share that with anyone or document it or do what I’m doing right now by blogging about it. For that reason, the summer may be outwardly quieter than usual, and maybe I’ll have fewer posts each week.  Perhaps that’s how this blog shifts into its own arc of winter, something that’s been hinted at and may finally be happening. Not that I’m planning on going anywhere anytime soon – some winters are a lifetime long. 

As I find myself back at Braddock Park, there is still light in the sky. It’s been quite a day – and all of this in a single day – so I take an early sleep. It is not a content one, however, as I’m restless and uneasy. My legs hurt from too much walking – so much so that I can’t find a position that is comfortable, and I toss and turn much of the night. When at last I drift off, a man starts screaming profanities outside on the street, waking me again. 

Giving up on sleep by 8 AM, I make the bed and head out for breakfast at Cafe Madeleine. Overnight the air has changed dramatically. All hints of summer have been sucked out of the atmosphere. It is chilly and overcast, like fall is back, like winter is coming, and the unease of the night spills into the new day. 

Still, the gardens remain in bloom, and their blooms will last longer this way. 

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Boston Misadventures – Part 2

A number of years ago, I had made a trip to Boston to see Kira and wound up taking this same route to pick her up from work. Back then, my walk had taken place on a cold night in late fall, when most of the leaves were already down, and a chilly rain had fallen leaving puddles at every turn. What a change in such weather on this afternoon. With the heat rising, I walked through the center mall of Commonwealth Avenue, beneath the canopy of shade-giving trees, past the statues of historical noteworthiness, all the way to the entrance of the Boston Public Garden. In the midst of the glorious spring, I thought back to the last time we met in person – it must have been on this trip to Boston in January of 2020 – which was the last time I’d gone anywhere before COVID hit. I didn’t know the import of that trip, and how I would have to turn it into that year’s Holiday Stroll

Now, those memories mingled with the path of today, and they jarred me with a sense of sadness, a loss of that way of life. Maybe just for now, maybe for a while, maybe forever. Commonwealth met the Public Garden. I crossed the street and entered, wondering where Boston was sending me, what messages I was supposed to receive. 

“Take what you like, give what you want.”

The words were printed on this little stand that appeared as by magic in the midst of the Boston Public Garden. There was a message there. An important one, and a pertinent one. It holds true as much for friendship as for life. But there was something underlying it as well, a darker tone of ominousness that lurked right around the corner. I paused to take a photo of these puppets, spooked and slightly disturbed by them, as if they were some gingerbread house waiting to ensnare the unwary. Then I thought I should have more faith in people. As I walked around the stand, a person in a mouse’s costume sat next to it – I hadn’t seen them there and I was startled. Silent but for a nod, the human face beneath the mouse’s was barely discernible, and covered in lace, making for an even more disturbing visage. Backing away from the giant mouse, I came upon a trumpeter playing to no one in particular. 

If there was a message in his song, I could not hear it, and I felt like I was missing something, or going the wrong way. Still, I followed the path toward Beacon Hill, unwavering. Boston held its secrets usually for good reason. All would come right in the end, I had to believe. 

A fringe tree lowered its bowers and panicles of bloom – and suddenly a happy memory of Kira and I in this very garden came back to me. I’d unconsciously avoided the fringe tree I recalled – the one I made Kira pose in front of probably a decade ago. Now, inescapable and right in my way, I could not avoid it, or its sweet perfume. 

It smelled of the same intoxicating fragrance – bringing back that day, and other days even further back – in Suzie’s side yard, in the Wasilkowski’s front yard – in all these yards of childhood – and I wondered if life would be mostly memories from this point forward, and whether would that be entirely awful. 

At the end of the path, I crossed to Charles Street and followed it almost to the end, where a Thai restaurant – The King and I – had a table available for us. I sat down at the appointed time, and in a few minutes Kira walked in. It was the first time we had seen each other since January 2020. I sensed her to my right before I could bring myself  to look up to see her. Averting eye contact is my main tell of being upset with someone. 

So much had happened since that winter, and for so much we had been out of touch, as was her wont when things got difficult. I needed to talk to someone then, and she wasn’t there. Worse, she hadn’t shared what was going on in her life. Weaker friendships had fallen apart over far less, but so had stronger friendships. I knew this, and wanted us both to have an opportunity to address the last year and a half, and see where we were, and how we each wanted our friendship to continue. Could the pandemic have taken our friendship as one of its many casualties? For the first time, sitting across from her, I allowed the thought to cross my mind. 

We each spoke and we each listened. I felt our friendship still there, yet I felt it shift into something different. I also felt it hesitate and hold, and I embraced that. Such things weren’t to be decided or determined at a single lunch. We were not the rash young people we’d been when we first met in Boston in the fall of 1998. We would not yell and scream and storm out in a mad scene. We would not part in anger, nor would we part in happiness or resolution. Nothing is that easy anymore. We parted in a chilly uneasiness, unable to hug and stranded in our respective points of view. It was as bad, and as good, as it could have gone. For once, I expected the actual outcome, and it came to pass. 

It didn’t feel good, but it felt right, for now. In the past, when I’ve felt similar sadness, I’ve found my way to some body of water, to feel grounded, to feel connected to this world. Hastening my pace, I walked all the way to Boston Harbor, where I once walked after a guy I thought I loved didn’t love me back. On this day, I sought the coolness of the sea, to clear my head and help me see.

This was a different sense of loss – not quite complete, not nearly resolved – and I wondered at what other people had given up, willingly and unwillingly, over the past year and a half. There was a hardness in myself that wasn’t there back then – I felt it, and it was a good thing. It had gotten me through. In many ways there was less I was willing to accept, and in some ways there was more. Both seemed to be working against Kira and I hanging out for the moment, and that was ok. Part of me isn’t ready to hang out with people again anyway. 

Turning my back to the sea, I let the water keep some of my anguish, and then let some retail therapy work its magic like only shopping can. Emerging from the almost-bustle of downtown, I found my way back to Public Garden, feeling more grounded and more certain than a couple of short hours ago.

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Boston Misadventures – Part 1

It’s been well over a year since I’ve made a solo-overnight trip to Boston, and with my friendship with Kira in the balance, it was time. After looking at the weather, I moved this quick journey up by a day, so I’d have most of Thursday in town, while the sun was shining and the weather was warm. That turned out to be proper planning, as the city as alight in blossoms and beauty until I departed the next day. 

All the little squares before the brownstones were filled with flowering shrubs and plants. These tiny gardens, some protected by wrought iron gates and fences (which lend an even more inviting atmosphere with their dare-to-defy-it air of the forbidden) are often bathed in dappled sunlight, giving a feeling of shaded relief from a hot day

After parking the car, I walked through the bloom-festooned Southwest Corridor Park and stopped by the condo, where I peered out the window and looked down on this Chinese dogwood. One of the few times I’ve been afforded such a vantage point, it was a lovely welcome back to the city I love, and in which I still manage to find new enchantments, even if it’s in the simple turn of a new view-point. 

My main purpose for this trip was to see Kira, and see what could be done to improve or mend our slightly-frayed friendship. She’d gone through some difficult times in the fall of 2020, and basically stopped corresponding without explanation or reason. It’s her usual method of operation, but in 2020 I was having troubles of my own – who wasn’t? – and I relied on simple texting and phone calls with friends to keep me going. She wasn’t there for that at a time when I really needed it, and I know she was going through stuff of her own, which is why it would have been more timely and important to connect then. She tends to push friends away at those times, and normally I let that happen – this time was different. We’d gone several months without getting in touch, and my sadness began to be shaded with anger and annoyance. Not one to be rash or quick to end a decades-old friendship, however, I wanted to re-connect and see what we could do to make things right again. 

Usually, I’d have invited Kira to spend the weekend with me at the condo, but this was a different world, and that just wasn’t possible. All I could do was meet up with her for a lunch near her workplace, so I made my way to Beacon Hill

Taking my time, I peered into the garden plots along the way, pausing to take a picture, or sniff an iris, or just to let a memory make itself known, and remembered. 

Boston is filled with such ghosts for me, especially now. They are mostly happy conjurings, accompanied by wistful half-smiles, and sometimes little chuckles. The older I get, the more they tend to move me, and the sadder ones feel more poignant with the passing of time, and the arrival at places closer to wisdom and acceptance. On this day, I recalled the ghosts of Kira and myself – and the much-younger and less-formed shapes of the people we would one day become. I protected those memories, and set up a fortress around the past, much like these little iron gates that forbid access to the flowers and plants that stood behind them. I just couldn’t tell if I was putting up gates to delineate the past from the present, or whether this was an ending or a temporary protection. It was a beautiful and bittersweet befuddlement, and Boston would send me on another journey that answered far fewer questions than it raised…

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Sunset Calla

Perfectly anointed as the ‘Sunset’ calla, this beautiful calla lily called out for me to take its picture as I passed it in the garden center the other day. A fitting name for such a pretty flower. ‘Summer’ would have worked well too, but this is slightly more specific to its exquisite shading. As Gloria Estefan would say, ‘the words get in the way’…

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Dazzler of the Day: Ben Cohen

It feels almost redundant to name Ben Cohen as the Dazzler of the Day, as he has been celebrated and honored here so many times before, but even those who seem to be given the world deserve the acknowledgment, and some of our most celebrated humans have gone without love or recognition because everyone else just assumes they get it all the time. To forego that travesty, this post crowns Cohen as Dazzler of the Day, something he can add to the Hunk of the Day honor he got here so many moons ago. He remains a stellar force in the world, continuing to fight against bullying with his StandUp Foundation, and a guy who does the right thing will always be a hot guy in these parts – not to mention a Dazzler. 

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The Madonna Timeline: Song #164 – ‘Bedtime Story’ – March 1995

{Note: The Madonna Timeline is an ongoing feature, where I put the iPod on shuffle and write a little anecdote on whatever was going on in my life when that Madonna song was released and/or came to prominence in my mind.}

Peeking out of the turret in Usen Castle, I envision whirling dervishes spinning in the sky, all crushed purple velvet and tiny darkened spectacles – wisdom in motion, divinity enthralled. They spin and spin, leaping from crescent moon to star in some astrological dance intent on rearranging the firmament as we know it. Like cardboard scenery, the sky shifts, impossibly painted on paper in the most outrageous shades of blue and indigo, ocean and air and the bottomless and topless abyss called space. Future and past clash in fantastical surreality, and the dream of the latest Madonna song, ‘Bedtime Story’, plays out as if this was all actually happening, as if it were all actually real. Looking back at that March pocket of 1995, I’m no longer what did or didn’t happen. All that feels true is simply that – a feeling, a notion, the causing of a commotion.

Inspired by Madonna’s touring persona, I ambled around upstate New York and called it a Friendship Tour, stopping to see friends at Potsdam, Rochester and Ithaca – just as March proved to be mostly winter instead of spring. Bandages around my wrists, and adorned with golden charm bracelets, accentuated the silk pajamas I wore to bed: the madness of Norma Desmond coupled with her frail sadness, and an indefatigable battalion of earnest if misguided hubris. What kingdom was this? On what throne did I pose while Ann took my picture and her mother laughed at my nonsense? It was wooden and high-backed, and I feel it solid and real in my hands, immovable beneath my body. An actual throne, to kick off anything but an actual tour, and in my head the two blurred, and I began to believe the myth I had made for myself.

TODAY IS THE LAST DAY THAT I’M USING WORDS
THEY’VE GONE OUT, LOST THEIR MEANING
DON’T FUNCTION ANYMORE…
LET’S…
LET’S…
LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS HONEY…

Ann and I drive north, into the snowy land of Potsdam, winding through the backroads and braving the snow and ice and brutal sun. It’s the tail end of my sophomore year at Brandeis and I’m already spent. Reading Rabelais has put me in a foul and mischievous mood, at odds with many of my friends and family, and so I rely on Ann, who loves me no matter what comes out of my mouth (or goes into it). We laugh and sing along to Aretha Franklin’s ‘Freeway of Love’ and Belinda Carlisle’s ‘I Feel the Magic’ while the snowy banks rush by in a blur. When we arrive at our friend Missy’s dorm, she is nowhere to be found, and this being in the time before cel phones, we simply hunker down in the hallway and wait. I spin in a circle for a few more pictures, my ridiculously shredded red sweater flailing about in tattered strips – some vague homage to Salome via Norma Desmond – and all the while Ann lifts my sunken spirits, heals my wounded wrists, and brings me back to life.

TODAY IS THE LAST DAY THAT I’M USING WORDS
THEY’VE GONE OUT, LOST THEIR MEANING
DON’T FUNCTION ANYMORE…
T R A V E L I N G . . .
LEAVING LOGIC AND REASON
T R A V E L I N G . . .
TO THE ARMS OF UNCONCIOUSNESS

Madonna does her part too, though I’m not sure if her new song is a help or a hindrance on my emotional state of mind. ‘Bedtime Story’ is the title track from her latest album, ‘Bedtime Stories’ – a trippy little nugget of music penned by Bjork and eons away from anything Madonna had ever done. It was a cosmic left-fielder on the R&B/New Jill Swing sound of the rest of the album, and a thrillingly new sonic adventure from a woman whom some had already written off in the aftermath of ‘Erotica’ and ‘Sex’. Here she was, bravely and defiantly moving forward, holding onto her pop crown, and not for nearly the last time, as she put out a spectacular video of instantly iconic poses and looks. If the song itself wasn’t a #1 smash like its predecessor ‘Take A Bow’, it held a special place in the hearts of her die-hard fans. It also informed this very tender time in my life, when I sought solace in the arms of friends, forgoing lovers as much as I might have liked one. When on the brink of self-obliteration, first-time lovers are not usually much help.

LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS HONEY
LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS
LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS HONEY
LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS…

While Ann is staying with Missy in her dorm, I’ve secured a hotel room nearby. I’m still not quite ready to be around people, even those who love me most. Wrestling with personal demons, in the deep dark of night, is not a communal affair. Such battles must be fought alone, if they are to be won for good. I cannot explain it then; I cannot explain it now. Ann understands, and leaves me to the war in solitude.

WORDS ARE USELESS, ESPECIALLY SENTENCES
THEY DON’T STAND FOR ANYTHING
HOW COULD THEY EXPLAIN HOW I FEEL?

Alone in the hotel room, after friends have departed, I lower the lights and confront the silence. The appalling silence. The silence that dares to try to comfort me after all its betrayals. And after banishing everyone from my space, I suddenly panic at the thought of not marking this time, and so begin the nagging attempt of immortalizing the moment on 35 mm film. Sinking down to the floor in a silk robe, I sit in the shallow pool of light that falls from the bathroom door, looking at the ground, pondering the position of a young man willing himself out of the world.

T R A V E L I N G . . . T R A V E L I N G . . .
I’M TRAVELING
T R A V E L I N G . . . T R A V E L I N G . . .
LEAVING LOGIC AND REASON
T R A V E L I N G . . . T R A V E L I N G . . .
I’M GONNA RELAX
T R A V E L I N G . . . T R A V E L I N G . . .
IN THE ARMS OF UNCONSCIOUSNESS

My sleep, when it finally comes, is restless. It feels like it snows a bit as my eyes wander to the window, but I don’t know if I’m dreaming that. Pulling the curtains open and closed and open again, as the gray light of a dying winter seeps into the room, I’m no longer sure if I’m sleeping or awake, whether it’s night or morning, if I’m actually there or actually not.

The room should feel cold on such a night, and maybe it does. Physical sensations have always been secondary to emotions, and it’s already made a mess of my young life. If we only knew to survive first and feel things later, so much danger might have been avoided.

LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS HONEY
LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS
LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS HONEY
LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS…

That next day, we rise early. The sky is overcast but bright – the lightest of grays that is a cover of clouds but doesn’t quite look like it. It is simply as if the sky has drained itself of color, leaking every bit of sacred blue into some hidden sea. Whatever I had hoped to find or discover on the previous night’s voyage of solitude proved annoyingly elusive. As my friends arrive, I have nothing to show for it. Still, I remember that night. To this day, I remember it, and remarkably better than so many other nights with so many other forgotten people. Maybe I made peace with at least one of my demons. Maybe I had too many then to even notice.

We climbed into the car, a rack of costumes hanging in the back seat. We were heading to Rochester for the next stop. A mosaic-patterned scarf in reds and purples flew like a flag from the car antenna – the closest we would get to any sort of recreation of the bus extravaganza from ‘The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert’. It took flight, and in its silly way lifted my spirits.

AND INSIDE WE’RE ALL STILL WET
LONGING AND YEARNING
HOW CAN I EXPLAIN HOW I FEEL?
LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS HONEY
LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS
LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS HONEY
LET’S GET UNCONSCIOUS…

Rochester, future city and site of a multitude of sins and mistakes, was right then a refuge, and Ann’s dorm room at RIT felt like home. With her band of misfit friends, I settled in and simply allowed myself to exist. The show would go on, and I would start assembling a vision of myself that wasn’t quite there yet, one that wasn’t quite real, filled with dramatic pomp and manipulated circumstance, which would carry me through the next few difficult years, as on the wings of a dream. With Ann by my side, I took off, and all those grand delusions would prove more than ephemeral ghosts.

T R A V E L I N G . . . T R A V E L I N G . . .
IN THE ARMS OF UNCONSCIOUSNESS
AND ALL THAT YOU’VE EVER LEARNED
TRY TO FORGET
I’LL NEVER EXPLAIN AGAIN.
SONG #164 – ‘Bedtime Story’ – March 1995
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Shooting Dogwood Stars

It’s just the very beginning of the Chinese dogwood’s blooming journey, and while I usually wait until these have turned a whiter shade of pale, we need the glimpse of cheer now. This is one of my favorite trees, providing all the beauty of the American dogwood, but only once all the leaves have emerged. It also extends the season for another few weeks, making it ideal for the entry of summer. 

The actual flowers are still in tight bud – what we are seeing as the ‘petals’ are technically bracts. The real flowers are small and insignificant, but they’re the ones who will produce the raspberry-like fruit later in the season. (Sadly, they’re raspberry-like only in appearance, not taste or texture.) For now, the show has just begun… 

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Putting Bedtime to Bed

Tomorrow the Madonna Timeline returns with one of the final songs to be featured from the ‘Bedtime Stories’ album – it’s a bit of a trip, but so is the song, so it works. ‘Bedtime Story’ was one of the more experimental releases for Madonna, and it didn’t achieve the massive success that other perhaps more calculated risks did in the past. In this case, the Bjork-penned track may have been too ahead of its time. It’s grown on me over the years, but it’s still not one of my favorites. That’s ok – everyone has their preferences and favorites when it comes to Madonna. 

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