A Somber Recap to Start June

It is with a weary and heavy heart that we begin the month of June. Usually a time of celebration and jubilance, there  is nothing but sadness, doubt and worry based on what our country has become. I wish I had something more uplifting and inspirational to say. I wish I could find something that would inspire those feelings in me, but I’m at a loss. While the world burns around us, I turn more insular, relying on Andy to be strong, to keep us going, and somehow he does. Turning off the television and the computer, I take lots of walks in our small yard, examining each plant and tree, breathing in the sweet scent of the Korean lilacs and squatting down to get a close-up glimpse of the tree peony about to burst forth in bloom if the critters don’t eat her head first. In 2020, anything is possible, no matter how heartbreaking or upsetting. On with the recap…

It was a joke just a week ago, but how prophetic this comparison turned out to be

I’m now old enough to remember a more innocent time. Most of us are. 

My virgin brush with a virgin.

A flash mob with a purpose, and you know how they make me cry. 

When the bored get bored.

Whispers from loved ones in the perfume of a flower

Floral memories are the sweetest.

A gratuitous glimpse of Julian Morris because some gents deserve more than one glance. 

Remembering a lost mate from childhood

I hope we can one day dance again.

Mourning what has become of America.

Hunks of the Day included Dr. Andrew Neighbors, Jim Cooney, Rick Fox, Maxi Iglesias, and Giovanni Pernice.

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As The World Burns

Anyone with half a head and part of a heart knows that what’s happening in the world right now isn’t right.

It’s a story that has lived in America for centuries, the years and layers of blood embedded in the very soil on which our children are raised. And while we have seen some of its ugliness before, it feels very different now, perhaps because of the leadership in charge. Maybe that’s why while I usually do my best to steer clear from political commentary, I can no longer remain silent, and this website must take a moment to take a stand. 

As a biracial gay man of a certain age, I am well aware of prejudice and marginalization. 

As the son of a doctor and nursing professor, I am also well aware of my privilege, mostly economic, which intersects with and sometimes transcends other issues.

But I will never know what it’s like to be a black person in this country.

I am, however, quite sure that every black person has been treated differently at one time or another because of their race. I know this to be true. You know it too. Deep down… you know it too. We have to start there. 

I’ve seen far too many people playing on the safe side of not taking a stand, or worse, taking a position on each singular incident of riot and protest as if it existed in and of itself, and not part of years of systemic inequality, racial profiling, and derelict leadership. 

Kneeling didn’t work. You said it was disrespectful. And you know what? You further shamed such peaceful acts of protest. Now you are upset about what these protests have become. Think about that. In essence, you don’t want any form of protest, and I understand that. It’s uncomfortable. It’s disturbing. It goes against your beliefs.

But the Boston Tea Party was a riot of destruction.

The Stonewall riot was a riot of destruction.

Each was a movement to bring about the destruction of imbalance and inequality.

Kneeling, it turns out, wasn’t enough. And if you can’t understand the need for these protests, or at the very least be empathetic to why it’s happening, if you are so narrow-minded as to treat these actions as criminal acts that are happening outside of a cycle of historical oppression, then I respectfully request that you take a moment and think about the real history of America. This country was built on such oppression. Racism has been woven into the fabric of our existence. We have perpetuated it in ways overt and hidden, in the basic make-up of our social strata, in how and where we live. 

I’m trying to figure out the best way to navigate a life that accepts everyone openly and without judgment. Quite often, I fail miserably. But I’m still going to try. A long time ago I read “A People’s History of the United States of America” by Howard Zinn. A white man wrote about what atrocities the European settlers inflicted on the Native Americans, and later how the insidious stain of slavery bled through everything leading up to the riots of the 1960’s and beyond. The story continues to this day. The fight is necessary. The violence erupts when passive resistance goes unheeded, and the murders of black people continue to happen. 

Black Lives Matter. We should all be saying that, and without qualifying it by saying Blue Lives Matter or All Lives Matter. That intentionally misses the point of the movement, as well as trying to once again erase the ugly parts of our country’s history. It’s time to acknowledge that, and make motions to see our own prejudices and privilege, as well as understanding the need to push back when justice continues to languish. 

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It’s Time to Dance

Prior to this moment, one of my big pet peeves was YouTube stage videos in which the shadows of audience-member heads and clapping took away from the production at hand. But since I didn’t get to see ‘The Prom’ I was perusing online videos of its finale, ‘It’s Time to Dance’ and when I came across this one, I actually found comfort and solace in the immersive bump, shaky camerawork, and welcome-intrusions of the heads of audience members early in the clip. It may be some time before we get to experience that again, and I didn’t realize how much it was a part of a performance. 

Then there’s the exuberance of the song and the performances of the actors/dancers/singers, and taken together they’re enough to lift me up for one Saturday night. Spoiler alert: you may want to have a tissue at the ready when the audience erupts into applause and cheers at the kiss. 

I really miss this.

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A Time For Tears

I don’t know if I believe in ghosts. I do believe in memories that haunt like ghosts, that feel so strong and tangible that they manifest as ghosts, but are still no more than memory and mourning and love. How else to describe the haunting that happens every year around this time, when the world tilts toward outward happiness and on the surface all is sunny disposition? It was in May that a childhood friend died of a self-inflicted gunshot, and he comes to mind, without fail, each and every spring season that bleeds so beautifully into summer.

WOULD YOU KNOW MY NAME
IF I SAW YOU IN HEAVEN?
WOULD IT BE THE SAME
IF I SAW YOU IN HEAVEN?
I MUST BE STRONG
AND CARRY ON
‘CAUSE I KNOW I DON’T BELONG
HERE IN HEAVEN

It’s like they say in ‘Stand By Me’, and I’m loosely paraphrasing: you never really have the friendships you have when you’re a kid. If you’re lucky and the world helps conspire in your favor, you may hang onto a friend like that. Suzie is one such friend; our families were so intertwined there was no way out from each other’s orbit. My friends Ann and Missy are also from a time long before we were adults. We grew up together. And from the stale hallways of McNulty school, Jeff was a friend I had in grade school and then drifted further and further away until we barely knew one another in high school. By the time he decided to turn a gun on himself and end the pain, he already felt like a lost friend.

WOULD YOU HOLD MY HAND
IF I SAW YOU IN HEAVEN?
WOULD YOU HELP ME STAND
IF I SAW YOU IN HEAVEN?
I’LL FIND MY WAY
THROUGH NIGHT AND DAY
‘CAUSE I KNOW I JUST CAN’T STAY
HERE IN HEAVEN

In addition to this ballad I previously posted, there was another song that personified that dark almost-summer of 1992 – ‘Tears in Heaven’ by Eric Clapton. Written for his young son, who had fallen to his death from a skyscraper, it personified loss like no other song before or since. It played inescapably on the radio, and every time it came on, which was often, I turned the station or shut it off. Sometimes I would simply walk out of the room. Unable to process what happened, and unable to process that kind of grief, I shut down. It was survival. It was protection. It was what I had to do to get through another day. Another night. And I had to do it alone.

TIME CAN BRING YOU DOWN
TIME CAN BEND YOUR KNEES
TIME CAN BREAK YOUR HEART
HAVE YOU BEGGING PLEASE, BEGGING PLEASE
BEYOND THE DOOR
THERE’S PEACE I’M SURE
AND I KNOW THERE’LL BE NO MORE
TEARS IN HEAVEN

The school year ended, and I spent most of the time in and around the house. In so many ways, it felt like my childhood had finally, and definitively, ended – and I mourned that as much as I mourned Jeff’s death. In a sense, they were one and the same. I didn’t get to have one without the other, so I suppose I’ll never know for sure. That summer, they went hand in hand. 

This song kept surfacing, no matter how much I tried to escape it. The world doesn’t always let you get away with running from your sorrow. That doesn’t mean I listened. For all these years, I refused to listen. It brought me right back to that time, and there was enough madness and sadness in the world that I didn’t feel it was necessary to resurrect what had happened so long ago. Once again, I was wrong, so when the song came on a few days ago, I paused and listened to it. I went back and played it again. I dove into that ocean of sorrow, all the way down to where I had buried so many feelings and conflicted thoughts. I dove into my anger and rage, into the unfathomable waste and regret of what he had done, into the depths of seeing what it had done to his parents, to his family, to his friends.

WOULD YOU KNOW MY NAME
IF I SAW YOU IN HEAVEN?
WOULD YOU BE THE SAME
IF I SAW YOU IN HEAVEN?
I MUST BE STRONG
AND CARRY ON
‘CAUSE I KNOW I DON’T BELONG
HERE IN HEAVEN

There was so much sadness still there, so much raw hurt, such tragedy. And still, there was the same incomprehensible lack of understanding in how it came to happen, what steps and decisions and thoughts led him into that dark corner. How frightened he must have felt. How hopeless it must have seemed. How lonely it must have been. How could this star athlete, the most popular guy from McNulty Elementary School, have found himself in such a tragic space? And how could all the recent memories of my own choices and ghosts ~ the pills and plastic bags and rubber bands, the plastic hoses leading from the exhaust pipes of cars, the failures and attempts and failures again ~ make any other sense than in the gnawing thought that it should have been me, it should have been me, it should have been me. 

It took years for that to go away, and sometimes it does still haunt my heart. Maybe it should have been me. Maybe that’s how it should have played out. Maybe that originally made the most sense in the universe. Who had the most promise? Who would do the best things for the betterment of the world? It’s hard to think that I have come ahead in that tricky game of what-if. But the one thing I have learned is that we each had a choice, and we each made those choices in the best manner we knew. For whatever fluke or change of destiny, I’m still here, and even if Jeff chose not to be, I can choose to remember him, to try to make it mean something. In that small way, he’s still here too. 

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A Gratuitous Glimpse of Julian Morris

If you’re brave enough and bold enough to bare your naked ass in a photo shoot, you deserve a feature here. Celebrating the beauty of the body, the freedom of one’s birthday suit, and the artful eye of a talented photographer, these photos of Julian Morris stand alone as a testament to the enduring and timeless appeal of prettiness tinged with moodiness. There is a provocative and evocative thrill to certain photos, a thrill that will appeal to different people in different ways. That’s the gorgeous beauty of art. 

Mr. Morris has appeared here previously as a Hunk of the Day, and it may be time for a second crowning. 

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Valley Girls

Along with the lilac, lily-of-the-valley is one of those old-fashioned plants with whom most people of a certain age carry some sort of happy childhood memory. I’m not different from most people in that regard, and these rugged little perfume powerhouses remind me of my grandmother, who loved their scent so much she had all her bath products tinged with it. (It made gift-giving a snap since she always appreciated anything with their sweet perfume.)

They’ve been in their glory for the past two weeks, coinciding with the lilacs to provide a two-tiered fragrance combination that is the epitome of spring. In our backyard we have a patch of ‘Miss Kim’ lilacs from Andy’s Mum, and nearby a patch of naturalized lily-of-the-valley that came from I don’t remember where. The latter, in the typical invasive nature of the species, has colonized several areas of the yard since we moved in almost twenty years ago, and as much as I love the flowers, I’ve had to be rather ruthless with their encroaching rhizomes. It’s been a battle for a while now, though I usually let them have their flower show before cutting them back without mercy. Gardening isn’t for the weak of heart.

The foliage remains handsome and clean through the entire summer, and in fall it will occasionally turn a light yellow before disintegrating into papery wisps come the end of winter. In truly wretched conditions, it may prove more manageable and easy to control – a dry shade will eventually take its toll, but it’s nothing some moisture and a good topping of manure won’t turn around in a few short weeks. If you’re looking to coddle a few pips or get a large going from a small one, manure is also key, as is evenly moist but well-drained soil.

There is a pink variety that I have yet to see in person, and it sounds delightful, especially if used in a bouquet. Speaking of which, it takes a great deal of back-aching work to garner enough stems for a proper bouquet, but it’s worth it when the perfume fills a room.

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Flowers that Whisper of Loved Ones

When many of us are wisely taking precautions by limiting our travel and visits to family, we look for ways to connect through memory and sensory experiences that bring back loved ones who are distant or even gone forever. Such was the case of this bouquet of lilacs, which I picked for Andy in the hopes of reminding him of happy memories with his Mum, who gifted us with the original plant from which we now reap these armfuls of flowers.

A single vase is enough to fill a room with their sweet perfume – and these have other happy memories associated with them. They used to greet us every Memorial Day weekend in Ogunquit when we’d first step into our room at the Ogunquit Beach Inn. A stand of the traditional, old-fashioned New England variety lined the driveway, and if we stood on our roof-deck we could almost reach over and touch the lavender-hued blooms. The fragrance carried on the breeze – the quintessential perfume of spring, of hope, of welcome and warmth.

This year, the bouquet reminds us of those happy times, and the loss of them as well. Not in a sad sense, really, more a calming and reassuring presence of people and places we’ve known, and times touched by love and merriment

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Only Boring People Get Bored

People seem to be going stir-crazy right now. I’d love to be going to Boston every other weekend, seeing shows on Broadway, flying to Savannah or California, and going to the movies or out to dinner. Of course I miss those things, but it’s not an onerous punishment to be staying at home. Some people have indicated they are getting bored. It’s always been my opinion that only boring people get bored.

There are more books in the world than can ever be read, more music than can ever be heard, more nuances in the texture of a single ceiling if you know how to look and examine and explore the wondrous working of the mind.

When I was a kid every once in a while I’d work myself into a state where I would think I had nothing new to do, and I’d whine and complain to my mother that I was so bored. Wisely, my mother ignored my aimless whining, allowing me to work through it on my own. It sucked and I hated it, but it made me a better person. I learned patience. I learned quiet. I learned how to be ok sitting still and doing nothing. And for all of my adult life, I have been able to enjoy being quiet and doing nothing. There is such a sense of peace in that. I don’t see that in today’s youth, nor in some of my own generation. People freak out if there’s no television or wifi. They can’t stand to have a few minutes of stillness and silence.

I think it’s because we have been conditioning ourselves to be constantly stimulated and occupied. I never needed that, and I’m much happier because of it. Too many people are tormented by their inability to simply be – to sit in the stillness, to sit in the company of yourself, to be quiet and to be ok with the silence. When you can do that, it’s almost impossible to be bored. Every moment and every situation is the opportunity to return to yourself and the little space you’ve made in the universe. 

And if you’re still bored after exploring the interior of your mind, just go on TikTok and follow @alanilagan already.

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A Flash Mob with a Purpose

Most of you know that flash mobs typically make me cry. Thankfully this one was short enough that no major waterworks erupted, but I will admit to welling up a bit. It happens every time I see people doing their best to better the world in however small a way it happens. This time it may have a little more impact, as the “Wear a Mask” campaign, championed by our own Governor Andrew Cuomo, gets some help with a socially-distanced flash mob treatment to spread the #NewYorkTough word. Created and choreographed by Jim Cooney, this is what New York does best. Check out the full background and credits here, and start spreading the news.

As for the idea of wearing a mask to be respectful of the health of others, only a selfish asshole refuses to wear one when in public.

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My First Brush with a Virgin

If ever there was a time for day drinking, this certainly qualifies. This is the safest way to do it right, and you can do it when working from home and on your Zoom conference too. I’m talking about this Virgin Mary – an alcohol-free version of the classic Bloody Mary. I’ve enjoyed the usual Bloody Mary many a time, often switching out the vodka for gin, or tequila in service of a Bloody Maria. It’s a quintessential brunch treat, and its zippy tang and spicy bite stand strongly on their own without any liquor, which is why the virgin version of this drink is more popular than the virgin versions of many other drinks. 

I found a new recipe for this one – called the ‘Raw Spicy Mary’ – from the book ‘Dry: Non-alcoholic Cocktails, Cordials and Clever Concoctions’ by Clare Liardet. I will attempt to make my way through most of the recipes (like this Blood Orange Sunrise) as we turn from cocktails to mocktails.

This one calls for fresh plum tomatoes, a bit of red pepper, a celery stalk (and an additional one for garnish) some red chili, a dash of cider vinegar, the juice of half a lemon, horseradish, a splash of olive oil, sea salt, and freshly ground pepper. They put the veggies through a juicer – I just jammed everything in a glass and stuck the immersion blender into the thing with a splash of water. Now is not the time to stand on ceremony. Once mixed well, I poured it over some ice and added a celery stalk or two. 

It was decent. Much fresher than any other version I’ve ever had, which was nice. A little blander too, since I wasn’t using a flavorful, high-salt/high-sodium mix or the bite of alcohol. Tips for my next attempt: switching out the lemon with lime. More horseradish. A dash of Tabasco, maybe a small spoonful of chipotle in adobo sauce for another layer of heat and earthiness. 

This is a promising start to the summer to come, and a lovely drink to toast to the workday. 

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Flashing It Back

When the world shakes and shimmies, disturbing the status quo and reminding us that no human is really in charge of anything, I tend to turn to nostalgia and the comforts of remembering a time that seemed simpler and easier and not quite so dim. To that end, I’ve been taking daily walks around our little gardens, soaking in the sun and silence, and remembering the way things used to be. This is not a state in which one should stay, and it’s not a place in which I usually find myself, but for now, for this moment, it is welcome.

These vintage photos were taken during the first or second summer in our current home, about eighteen years ago. We still have that weigela in the background, though it’s on its last legs and in need of replacement. Out with the old and in with the new, and this garden year is about editing and cutting out what doesn’t work. Gardening remains a ruthless game. There is comfort in that too. 

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2019 versus 2020

This just about sums it up, and we are not even halfway through the year. 

Here is our pool then and now.

It is in need of a new liner, which is why we didn’t bother to open it, against my instincts, so now here it sits – an ideal habitat for mosquitoes, flies, ducks, and the occasional opossum (that post is coming…) Contrasted and compared to last year’s pool scene, this is a stark reminder of the bullshit that is 2020 in a nutshell. There is a lesson in learning to wait.

Oh well. Such first-world problems aren’t the end of our world, first or otherwise. Annoying? Yes, especially when it’s been sunny and in the 80’s and there is literally nothing else to do, but my mind opens up at such times, and the imagination unfurls like it has since I was a child, and suddenly a backyard even without a pool is a magical oasis. Hell, our living room alone is a place of endless enchantments, with its books and photo albums and music and memories and artistic objects and gifts from around the world. Going through all the stories connected to everything there could take an entire month, and all of it filled with happiness and contentment. 

Now is not the time to opine our current circumstances nor compare it to past glories. So much of our discontentment is based on unreasonable comparisons rather than simply examining the moment at hand and how we feel in it. Where is the beauty here and now? Where might we find beauty in the next hour or so? The rest doesn’t matter. 

For instance, around the pool at the moment is a grand Korean lilac bush in full, fragrant bloom. The ever-increasing stand of Ostrich ferns is at its most perfect stage, when the fronds are full and fresh, in their brightest shade of chartreuse. The peonies are in tight bud with the promise of a perfumed future. There is so much to embrace and cherish here and now. 

And eventually we will make beauty out of the pool again. And it will be better and brighter than before, because it will happen when we are present, when we can be mindful, when we can take it in like we never did.

We won’t be looking back.

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A Double Recap Day For a Holiday

This morning’s recap of Memorial Days past finds companionship with our usual Monday recap of the week that came before. Traditionally we would just be making our way back to upstate New York after a long weekend in Ogunquit, but the world has changed and shifted beneath our feet. This one will be spent in the garden, and there is joy and beauty in that, as evidenced by the lilacs seen here. On with the weekly recap…

It began with some shirtless male celebrities

Boss lady.

Glitter & wisdom in a PSA.

Fabulous repeating.

You can munch on this sweet carpet.

Tulipa.

I am now addicted to TikTok, so follow my ass there

Striking a pose for three decades

Nude male drawings.

This is why I adore Jasmine Shea.

In these serious times, we live life through imagined worlds and wishful scenarios, such as this virtual weekend in Boston with Kira. It was so fantabulous it needed a second part

We revisited a night at the Hotel Chelsea, for better or worse. 

My journey in therapy continues, and I absolutely love it. 

Memorial Days in Maine.

Hunks of the Day included Fran Tirado, Ben Foster, Zach Clayton, Reid Kisselback, and Olly B.

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Memorial Days in Maine, Remembered

Crossing the bridge into The Way Life Should Be was both a figurative and literal entry into Maine for many Memorial Days. The past couple of years we’ve switched things up, and part of me is sad for that, especially given this year’s entire derailment of travel, but we have a treasure trove of memories that I’ll unfurl in this post. A moment of nostalgia feels good right now. It is a moment of comfort. A reassurance. Let’s look back…

Our very first trip to Ogunquit was in 2000, right after we met, and it was actually our very first trip anywhere together. It was late summer, and the town was getting ready to shut down for the season. It was just waking up to extending things through the end of fall, but back then it was the end of summer and almost the end of the vacation season. It turned out to be the start of something wonderful, in many ways, and the next year we came back for Memorial Day weekend, where we would return for almost two decades. 

The first dozen years are well-documented in photographs, but I won’t bore you with that kind of slideshow. Instead, I’ll post the more recent links that are still up after the big website revamping after 2012. It will good to remember, especially since we haven’t been there in a few years, and, the state of the world being what it is, since we may not be there in the near future. 

Memorial Day in Ogunquit, Maine ~ May 2013

Memorial Day in Ogunquit, Maine ~ May 2014

Memorial Day in Ogunquit, Maine ~ May 2015

Memorial Day in Ogunquit, Maine ~ May 2016

There would also be more visits to the Beautiful Place By The Sea, such as this fall visit in 2017. But for a more comprehensive look, check out this post which included some of the summer and fall journeys we’ve taken there. 

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The Joy of Therapy

A Canadian goose walked to the edge of the river, then stood sentinel beside a tree. It had rained during the night and everything was wet, but there was a break in the sky, and though it was still grey, it was lighter, allowing for more sun to permeate the high clouds. I pulled into a little hidden park off the main road and checked my phone. I was due to video-conference with my therapist in a few minutes – we were trying out the new Telehealth options during the COVID crisis, and this was to be our first video call. Technological advances being what they are, and everyone also being on the same plan at this busy time of the morning, the call did not go through, so we ended up doing it the old-fashioned way over the phone without video. Getting over my trepidation over video calls would have to wait another week. I watched the goose approach the river and studied the vivid green of a patch of grass that led to a single picnic table. Our session began, and in the privacy of the Mini Cooper I settled in to a closer examination of the past.

It’s been over six months since I’ve been going to therapy regularly, and for the first time since I started I took a look back at the road behind me, not realizing how far I had come. Not that I’m anywhere near where I need or want to be just yet ~ this is not a finish lap by any means~ but I’m at a completely different place than I was back in the late fall of last year.  A global pandemic can re-order priorities I suppose, and when internal changes and shifts in the very bedrock of one’s existence are also at work, it’s impossible not to be swept up in some very dynamic and dramatic differences – some sort of plate tectonics, if I recall the earth-altering theory correctly from 8th grade Earth Science. 

How to navigate such swells in the tumultuous waters where we now find ourselves? I can’t quite explain it, other than to analyze the facts of the past few months, and find there some collection of clues that give reason to why I haven’t completely lost my shit. Quite the contrary, I feel more at peace and present than I have in a very long time. This I can only attribute to my therapy, a few books I’ve read, an online class in ‘The Science of Well-Being’, and daily meditation and mindfulness. The latter has been a constant and consistent part of my day since the early part of the year. Its calm and resulting joy didn’t happen overnight, and the more I meditate, the more the world seems to be falling apart – or maybe it’s the other way around. Whatever the case, meditation has been one of the main things keeping me grounded and moored when for almost 44 years I would have otherwise lost my mind from all that’s been happening. While other people seem to be consumed by anger and frustration and the realigning of what we considered normal, I’ve been able to process and accept things without as much emotional damage as I once might have suffered.

Ahead of me, a tree bloomed with white flowers. They were there before most of the foliage was out, something the redbud and the American dogwood and many cherry trees have in common – these flowers that appear before the main leaves, blooming without the background and support that most flowering plants have, but blooming nonetheless, even after the coldest winters, they are there, putting on their show, valiantly performing in the midst of late-season frosts and snowfalls. 

A large rock fronted with a plaque stood near my car, with the name of the park and a dedication on it. I was more interested in what was behind the rock, on its river side, where a pattern of lichens blossomed like flowers themselves in shades of grayish green and bright, bold chartreuse. Nature knows how to combine her colors and how best to show each of them off. Lichens, unlike most flowers, could easily withstand a full-blown, devastating snowstorm, no matter what time of year. Strength, resilience, and beauty.

As my therapy session went on that morning, I recalled moments of shame from my childhood, touchstone turning points where the trajectory and course of my life was being determined, and I was too little, too young to know how I was taking each hurt and heartbreak into the formation of my soul, and when I was finally old enough to understand I had already buried those things deep down in some inaccessible place to protect myself. It was the best I could do. It wasn’t the best thing to have done, but it was the best I could do. It was the best we all could do. 

Would I have discovered this without therapy? Perhaps, with a great deal of effort and time. Would I have been able to process such things without meditation? Perhaps, with a great deal of patience and self-discipline. But why make it more difficult than it has already been? I find therapy to be of great help, to help speed up processing and understanding, and to get a view into my mind that 44 years of living has sometimes worked only to obscure and hide. I find similar benefit in meditation and mindfulness to calm the mind, because I live and work and do my best when my mind is at a state of unrushed calm and quiet. Meditation has broadened that state for me, extending the ability to stay focused and steady the more I do it. The best thing about all this? I’ve only just begun – and the path ahead can be whatever I make of it. My plan is to slowly and gradually expand the meditation, and focus on bringing it into as many moments as possible. The ultimate goal is to make the peace and serenity I feel at the end of a meditation part of daily living. I’m getting there…

When it’s time to finish the session, I put the phone down and let out a deep breath. It was the closest I had come to crying during therapy, and it felt good. I got out of the car and walked to the edge of the river. I saw the goose there. We both looked down over the water; only one of us looked down over the past, and then he made a vow to let it go. 

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