Tacos of the Sea

One of the best lunches I’ve ever had was a simple dish of fish tacos. We had just walked the Marginal Way in Ogunquit, Maine, and in Perkins Cove we stopped for a meal at MC Perkins. While they generally do things on a fancier plane there, I ordered the fish tacos, and what arrived was a quartet of the most delicious delights I’ve been lucky enough to eat. Maybe it was the walk along the Maine shore that made me so ravenous, or maybe it was the way we simply seem to enjoy food more when on vacation, but this

While they did theirs with a simple fried white fish and typical flour tortilla, it was the accents that made it shine: a glorious red cabbage slaw, some fresh jalapenos and cilantro, and a tasty remoulade that brought it all together. For years I’ve been trying to find a similar dish, but in upstate New York such magic is in short supply. With our fryer in full effect, this seemed as good a time as any to see if I couldn’t replicate it myself, and in case you don’t want to read any further I’ll break it down with a simple spoiler: it was fucking fantastic. 

First up, the fish. After looking online at various options, I decided on a bastardized beer batter using 1 cup of flour and 1 cup of a Corona. One recipe I read called for a dark Mexican beer – an Equis Amber maybe? – but I wasn’t going out in the rain so a Corona would have to do. It’s one of the few beers I drink anyway; sometimes laziness dictates recipe substitutions. You mix them together, add some salt and pepper and smoked paprika, and let stand for about fifteen minutes – perfect timing to assemble the slaw.

Here’s what I used for the recipe:

  • 1 pound thinly sliced or shredded cabbage (I found a bag of red and green cabbage with carrots at Trader Joe’s and all the slicing and chopping was done)
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • ¼ cup thinly sliced & diced red onion
  • ½ cup chopped cilantro
  • ¼ of a jalapeno, finely chopped
  • ¼ cup fresh lime juice 
  • 2 Tablespoons olive oil

Mix it all together and you’re done. 

If you’re going for something healthier, you can probably omit the creamy sauce (though if you’re going for something healthy, a fried fish taco is rather pointless). I would advise indulging and adding this remoulade because it absolutely brings everything together. Again, I bastardized a mishmash of several online recipes, and the end result was, more or less, as follows:

  • ½ cup mayonnaise
  • ½ cup sour cream
  • Juice of half a lime
  • Tbsp of chipotle adobo sauce (or less if you’re shy in the company of some heat)
  • 1 teaspoon of fresh garlic, finely chopped
  • Salt and pepper to taste

This remoulade should really be made earlier in the day so the flavors can meld, but in a pinch it will do immediately. Obviously, I wasn’t waiting. We fried up the fish, assembled the tacos, and all was right again with the world. (Thanks to Pati Jinich for the inspiration!)

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Audience of One: An Interview ~ Part 2 – PVRTD Promo

“It was always the becoming he dreamed of, never the being.” – F. Scott Fitzgerald

The next morning dawns beautifully in Boston. Alan has decreed that an early bowl of phở will be the perfect way to begin our shopping excursion, even as he frets over the fact that it’s not quite cold enough to get the full warming effect of the Vietnamese soup. A few minutes after our appointed meeting time, Alan arrives at the designated restaurant, a corner landmark in the heart of Boston’s Chinatown. A rust-colored top coat is flung over his chair as he sits; a sculptural scarf of felt flowers encircles the coat’s collar and spills to the floor. Practiced nonchalance would be how he would describe the entrance; to the rest of us it looks like careless confidence. A floral shirt runs over the top of his pants, untucked and uncharacteristically lending an unkept aspect to his countenance. In Boston, on a shopping spree, he is dressed to work: digging out bargains, flitting from store to store, and hurrying along to beat the coming crush of college kids who are sleeping in on the weekend. This is his happy place; this is his native soil. “I grew up in the retail world,” he chuckles. “Made me who I am today!” It’s impossible to take it too seriously.

Against some odds and bets, he’s a chipper morning person. One might assume he’s a creature of the evening, but these days he likes to be in bed by 11. “I’m too old for late nights,” he sighs at one point. On this morning, despite the lines around his eyes, he is bright and engaging. “I just love the phở!” is one of several exhortations he makes during the course of ordering the meal. Reports of moodiness seem, once again, to be quite missing the mark, and though he maintains he prefers solitude to shopping with a buddy, I am one of the trusted few he’ll deign to bring along, provided I “tow the line.” We both laugh a little at that.

As much as his appearance and guises have changed over the past couple of decades (yes, it’s been that long), it feels like the young man I met long ago is still intact and that life, in spite of the typical bumps and bruises it doles out, has allowed him to remain the person he’s always been. Not that there hasn’t been growth, particularly when it comes to his creative expressions.

Returning to the notion I was just realizing from the afternoon before, it struck me that Alan is once again in a different place from where he was the last time we met. That was when he was about to embark upon ‘The Delusional Grandeur Tour’ way back in 2015 – his self-proclaimed final tour (the seventh of such endeavors) and he was finally realizing that the manifestation of his creative artistic output need not influence his own emotional and mental well-being. For quite a while, I think we all worried it might, so strikingly autobiographical were his projects, so vainly self-centered and self-serving some of them seemed. Yet by the time ‘The Delusional Grandeur’ spectacle rolled around, it seemed as if he had made the leap from living his artistic output to managing it from a place of control and safety. It was a deliberate and hard-fought battle to reach such a space, and though there was the occasional veneer of calculation and manipulation to it, the execution and artistic intent was of such purity that the power of the piece bled through. Arriving at that point, however, may have scared him on some level. In previous modes he would put out a new project about once a year; this time he’s waited for about three trips around the sun before releasing something new.

Not that he’s been idle during that time. If you think about it, producing an average of 1000 words a day for his website was the rough equivalent of creating one previous project per month. His output was more substantial than ever, but the official ‘project’ – that all-encompassing behemoth of artistic creation – kept getting pushed off in service of his blog and website, as well as the more pressing concerns of a marriage and a job and maintaining a home and yard. Andy’s health had taken a downward turn, and while Alan was notorious for clamming up for fear of inviting the universe to wreak more havoc, he took a more active role in helping out and being a better husband. For someone who’s led a very charmed existence on many levels, this intrusion of real life into the fantasy of how he was portrayed was a drastic change, but he stepped up to the tasks at hand. I’ve always had a sneaking suspicion that he could do it; it was just a matter of whether anyone had the trust or know-how to let him prove it.

That most recent project, ‘The Delusional Grandeur Tour’ had been drawn out over two years. With “tour dates” being scattered fewer and farther between, and Alan finding himself at home more than away for the weekend, the tour book itself was posted in regular installments on ALANILAGAN.com, signaling a transition to online output, a major shift that will finally find full fruition when the new project premieres online in November, with in-person viewings of the photo book to follow. More telling is the fact that the online version contains about 100 more photographs than the physical book; proof that future projects may find themselves more web-oriented. That means more content, less interaction, and greater reach.

“In a way, my website has come full circle,” he explains as he rips up a bouquet of Thai basil and squirts some sriracha sauce into his bowl of steaming pho. “In the very beginning, the website was only going to be a repository for my work, an online representation for anyone who wanted to see the real thing. I would use it as a back-up for the physical copies of my projects, or a sort of virtual store-front for the kind of writing I did. Since then, it’s evolved into a blog, and a diary, and a place where new projects are born. Now, the physical book, which I just had printed for the new project, is sort of the repository and representation of a larger project that can be viewed in its entirety online. In that respect, things have flipped.”

That new project, entitled provocatively and mysteriously ‘PVRTD’ (yes, it’s short for ‘Perverted’) is taking up most of his promotional time. As he was coming to terms of being home more, and the end of his “touring” days, he was also feeling the familiar nudge of creative restlessness. By the winter of 2018, he’d formulated the general idea for ‘PVRTD’, and it would be as provocative as anything he had ever done.

{To Be Continued… See also Part 1}

 

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Can’t Turn Back the Hands of Time

Keep looking through the window pane
Just trying to see through the pouring rain
It’s hearing your name, hearing your name
I’ve really never felt quite the same
Since I’ve lost what I had to gain
No one to blame, no one to blame

“You like the classics?” Jamie Fox asks Jada Pinkett Smith as their taxi roams the streets of Los Angeles while the day turns to dusk. In one of the few Tom Cruise movies that I can stomach (the excellent ‘Collateral’) this opening musical scene sets the Zen-like tone of the whole movie, and seems a practically perfect entry for this extra Daylight Savings hour. Settle in, make a cup of coffee or tea and let’s go into Sunday, and this extra hour, in quiet and contemplative fashion. The world can wait a bit…

Time time time… see’s what become of me…

Seems to me, can’t turn back the hands of time
Oh, it seems to me, can’t turn back the hands of time

It’s strange the way we turn the time into November. Like a manual switch, the day after Halloween is instantly gray, damp and chilly, and the realization that we will never be going back to September is a sad one. We can only move forward, through the oblivion of winter and the rocky road of spring before we get back to some semblance of the state of summer. What a long trip that seems. A song like this helps us take the first steps of the journey. 

Keep looking through the window pane
Just trying to see through the pouring rain
It’s hearing your name, hearing your name
I’ve really never felt quite the same
Since I’ve lost what I had to gain
No one to blame, no one to blame

The mellow groove marks time, the melancholy lyrics mark our past, and all of it keeps us company when that’s all we have. Sometimes a song is the best company around. Much less messy when it comes to the peskiness of people. You can start it and stop it and repeat it, or shut it down altogether and nobody’s feelings get hurt. We are not so lucky with people. Or with time. Except on this day. We can turn it back, for one hour, and do it all over again. Make things right. Make things better. Maybe just listen a little closer this time. Appreciate things a bit more. Enjoy it. 

It’s only an hour. 

Seems to me, can’t turn back the hands of time
Oh, it seems to me, can’t turn back the hands of time
Seems to me, can’t turn back the hands of time
Seems to me, yesterday was left behind…

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Audience of One: An Interview ~ Part 1 – PVRTD Promo

“Self-exploration is very painful, but unless you do that, you will never know who you are and who you want to be.” – Iris Apfel

The best way to get to know who you truly are is to take a step back and remove yourself from your own situation. This is not an easy thing to do. Most people are too afraid or uneasy to ever make motions in such a direction. We get to be very comfortable with ourselves, and removing us from our own experience is daunting at best, debilitating at worst. Yet I’ve found that distancing yourself from your own life from time to time can be a very valuable lesson. It allows you to see yourself from a more objective and analytical perspective, something that creates the space for honest assessment and personal growth. Whenever I find myself in moments of doubt and uncertainty, or when I feel a little lost or unsure of where I’m headed, I’ll pause for an interview, as much for the adoring fans that inhabit my mind as for the mind itself. At such times it is best to slip safely into the third person; it’s easier to face the harsher truths about yourself that way.

Thus was I summoned to Alan Ilagan’s Boston brownstone, where he waited for my arrival on the front stairs on a fine September afternoon. Turning onto Braddock Park at one of the quainter bends on the Southwest Corridor Park, I spy him instantly. He is looking toward the fountain in the middle of the street, leaning in to listen to its soothing trickle of water. He will tell me later that he sleeps on the couch on such nights, just so he can be nearer to the window to hear the fall of the water. But I’m getting ahead of myself. It’s just my tendency to do so.

He nods at me from above, like the old friend I am. Today’s stance is one of silent benevolence, slightly royal in comportment but not overtly haughty. It’s the bearing of one who knows his worth, yet is not quite comfortable with others knowing it. A rather unbearable bearing when you think about it, and the puzzle that he often poses finds no further pieces falling into place. We shuffle them about some more…

He is waiting for friends, hence the extravagant get-up. Flowing pants in saturated tones of purple and maroon are festooned with elegant filigrees of gold. A lacy shirt accented by swirling whorls of lime-green sequins sparkles in the dappled sunlight of the afternoon. Around his neck hangs a tassel made up of fuchsia velvet balls, golden beads and sparkling crystals. His feet are encased in slippers of silken preciousness, with heels of green velvet and magenta flowers of the sheerest fabric. It sounds a bit of a mess but, as is often the infuriating case, he makes it work.

“Let’s go up for a cocktail,” he announces before I have a chance to consider sitting beside him.

We ascend the stairs to the second floor together. There is a deep reservoir of history here for him, yet none of it holds him down or makes things stuffy. If anything, there’s a certain freedom with such a bastion of the past to ground him so securely. That said, his heart is still slightly elsewhere, and that’s the way it’s always been. On this particular day, I sense it’s mostly with his husband, Andy.

“He will not be joining us this time,” Alan declares in a wistful tone, before giving a cursory summation of a recent blood clot and the ensuing travel ban that have stranded Andy in upstate New York, and in the many years that read into the growing lines of his face, I sense the concern and worry that he usually masks so well. This is a different Alan than the one I thought I knew. Every time I visit, it seems, he’s a little different. Often it goes with whatever project or theme that suits him for the moment. Many of us have seen him through various guises over the years, but this is one of the longer stretches we’ve been apart. Coming back will require some trust, some ice-breaking in the form of actual ice-breaking, as in the cocktail shaker he holds for one of the first Negronis of the fall season. Expertly shaving off a piece of orange peel, he pours a pair in spite of my weak protestations. “I’ll finish it if you really don’t want one,” he offers disdainfully. There’s something to be said for the comfort to be cruel. It’s a badge of honor for anyone who truly knows him, and in two decades of friendship I’m surprised by how few get this.

Sitting at the front window, the beauty and quiet of the moment strikes us both. As sunlight pours in through the bedroom – all bright white with accents of spring green (“That bedding is now out of season,” he admonishes, more an indictment of himself than me, who had absolutely nothing to do with the state of Alan’s bedding) – the afternoon slowly ripens into evening. Shirley Horn sings plaintively in the background (“the quintessential voice of fall”) and Alan hustles me through this initial interview as he has friends arriving for dinner. While keen to talk about the new project for this first reconvening of third person narrative in several years, it is enough to simply mark the beginning. The rest will come. We agree to meet the next day for a shopping session; he finds no therapy more potent than retail, and so I depart, leaving him to his impending guests.

{To Be Continued…}

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Perverse Thrills

The big promotional interview (and photo shoot) for my ‘PVRTD’ project will be posted starting later today, but here are a few sneak peeks from that pre-project promo effort, and a very disconcerting quote that reminds us of how humanity once failed us. It’s also a chilling warning at how distant or close we might be to a similar situation today. The cautionary signs are here. It begins in small ways, little increments of deteriorating freedoms, a chip here and there that we all let slide. ‘PVRTD’ is a reminder and a warning, a comment on the past and a concern for the future. It’s my own take on the current state of the world.

“One is tempted to say that the twentieth century has mistreated minorities in a more brutal fashion than many preceding periods. And it is precisely technological progress that has made possible ever more refined techniques of brutalization, torture, and obliteration.

Thus the fate of the gays under the Third Reich may serve as a touchstone for all those victims swept away by the hurricane of hatred. To this day, the extent and impact of this catastrophe has not been fully understood… In many ways, the specters of the Third Reich still haunt us – not because a few elderly Nazis may be hiding in South America and not because groups of younger neo-Nazis demand attention with recycled swastika ideologies and emblems. The specters begin to come to life whenever fanatical fundamentalists of any sect – religious or secular – take over a nation and call for a holy war against its most vulnerable and vilified minorities.” ~ Richard Plant, “The Pink Triangle”

Do not be fooled by the photos leading into this project. They represent a decadent world already gone by, a realm of fantasy and play where escapism is the only way to survival. There are hints of foreboding treachery to come, but we will ignore that for as long as we can. Ignorance. Apathy. A blind eye. This is how some of us cope. This is how some of us endure. Slippery as quicksilver, evolving at lightning speed, and transforming at the drop of a hat to secure our safety with disguise or pretend or make-believe. Sometimes the only freedom to be found is inside your mind. If you’re lucky to be so vacant, so unfeeling, so unattached…

Vapid beauty.

Empty elegance.

Hollow hearts.

~ P V R T D ~

…The New Project…

—November 2018—

///ALANILAGAN.com\\\

{The Projects Page}

( P E R V E R T E D )

[Follow Alan on Twitter & Instagram @alanilagan.]

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Tiny Threads: An Insignificant Series

The ‘S’ is for Super

And the ‘U’ is for Unique

The ‘P’ is for Perfection cause you know that we are freaks

The ‘E’ is for Exotic

And the ‘R’ is for Raps

So tell those nosy people just to stay the hell back!

#Supersonic

#TinyThreads

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Fry Me a River

Andy and I get our deep fryer out two or three times a year, and then schedule a week of deep-fried everything. We are currently nearing the end of another banner frying stretch, and if I don’t die from a heart attack we may make our first go at fish this weekend.

It began with a batch of lumpia, followed by regular fries and then sweet potato fries. Andy made his excellent turkey parmesan and I’m planning some sort of fried/wrapped banana treat. We’ll finish off with the fish for some fish tacos (always save fish for the last run because no one wants a fried banana flavored with fishy oil).

It’s so bad for you, but it tastes so good. The season of comfort food is upon us at last.

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‘PVRTD’ Press Release

Have we perverted society, or has society perverted us?

If you glanced at yesterday’s newspaper headlines without seeing the date, you’d be forgiven thinking we were back in the 1940’s. White supremacists are rallying, neo-Nazis are banding together, and we are witnessing the emergence and rise of a fascism that wants only to foster hate and division. What a stark difference this day is from one of those that existed in ‘The Delusional Grandeur‘ stretch of 2015, the last time Alan Ilagan released a project, and how much the world has changed in three short years…

The very act of loving can be a revolutionary act. It is a revolt against all that is ugly and base and mean in this world, an argument against all that is hateful and wrong. It strikes back at the heart of apathy, taking deadly aim at the notion of not caring. It engages and demands a response, far more than a hateful attack or wanton dismissal. Yet love is outwardly lacking in ‘PVRTD’, the new photographic project by Alan Ilagan; the images are diabolically lonesome, many are simply empty, static as death, and eerily silent. A mouth taped shut. Eyes taped closed. Hands taped still. Page after page of black and white contemplation. A series of an eye-patched general madly roaming a run-down factory. A gas mask in a duet with a Chinese hopping ghost. The haunting image of Ilagan having his head shaved by a menacing, faceless figure.

‘PVRTD’ brings him into hazardous new territory and is already being heralded as beautifully disturbing. The themes and images he touches on – the Holocaust, white supremacy, the Ku Klux Klan – are cultural totems, each rife with layers of historical hurt. Playing around with such images can be a hazardous business, and many artists have been burned by getting too close without understanding or realizing the deep-seeded connotations and offense that might result.

Yet now more than ever such a reminder may be needed. It’s dangerous folly to think that something similar won’t happen again – gay men and women are being killed around the world, even more transgender people are attacked and murdered – and the suicide rates for both groups are exponentially higher than heterosexuals. What if the real perversion is not of nature or of being different, but a man-made symptom? What if the most perverted thing is the hatred that separates one person from another?

‘PVRTD’ offers no such up-front explanation to its mysterious images, and even less of a defense for the more controversial photographs. Anyone who is brave enough to face the past, and more importantly anyone who is brave enough to own up to the present, knows what is being conveyed. It is a test of our own moral turpitude as to what we are going to do about it. ‘PVRTD’ posits, provokes, and projects – staking its claim in the pantheon of art as social revolution.

{‘PVRTD’ will be released online at ALANILAGAN.com in November 2018.}

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The Madonna Timeline: Song #145 ~ ‘Beautiful Scars’ -Spring 2015

{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.}

Just take me with all my stupid flaws
Changing me’s like shooting in the dark
Patience please, I’ll never be as perfect as you want me to be-lieve me I want it just as bad
Forgive me, wish I could change the past
Take it ’cause I’ll never be as perfect as you want
I think you’re confusing me with somebody else
I won’t apologize for being myself

Take me with all of my beautiful scars
I love you the way that you are
I come to you with all my flaws
With all my beautiful scars

A bonus track from 2015’s ‘Rebel Heart’ collection, ‘Beautiful Scars’ is standard Madonna fare – an airy disco-lite track that finds our heroine musing on the inner beauty to be found in the face of all our flaws. A nice-enough message with a nice-enough musical track, but I understand why it didn’t make the proper album cut. It percolates like coffee in the morning – nothing exceptional, nothing new, and nothing horribly offensive. Dare I say a little dull? I dare. Give it a listen and see what you think.

I love you the way that you are
With all my beautiful scars
Don’t judge me, just gotta let me be
Accept me, although I’m incomplete
My imperfections make me unique that’s my belief
I think you’re confusing me with somebody else
I won’t apologize for being myself
Take me with all of my beautiful scars
I love you the way that you are
I come to you with all my flaws
With all my beautiful scars
I love you the way that you are
With all my beautiful scars
Never say never
Anything is possible
Always been a rebel
Overcoming obstacles
I can’t give you perfect
But I can give you forever.

SONG #145: ‘Beautiful Scars’ – Spring 2015

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November Dreaming

He flew in from a cloud of smoke atop a grand piano.

An orchestra conducted by Michael Kamen welcomed him as he landed. 

And so Aerosmith celebrated the 10th anniversary of MTV way back in the fall of 1991 with their classic ‘Dream On’. 

Every time when I look in the mirror
All these lines on my face getting clearer
The past is gone
It went by, like dusk to dawn
Isn’t that the way
Everybody’s got the dues in life to pay
I know nobody knows
Where it comes and where it goes
I know it’s everybody’s sin
You got to lose to know how to win

For her homage to MTV’s anniversary Madonna had contributed a psychotherapy session in black-and-white cinema verite style, French beret, suspenders and the whole smoking vibe. Without any backing music, however, it is this song and not Madonna that recalls the haunting fall of 1991. 

Suzie was in Denmark that year, and the upcoming holidays would be the first we did not spend together. It would also be the first without her father helming the festivities. So many reasons for sadness, so many days of darkness. That was November, though, no surprises there. I couldn’t pinpoint whether my depressed countenance was typical seasonal sorrow, or something deeper. It didn’t much matter. Whether it was the moment or something more sustaining, destruction beckoned to my wayward  sixteen-year-old self. What sixteen-year-old hasn’t contemplated giving up? When November’s wind and rain crush the summer’s leaves beneath your feet, and you walk alone in the woods eyeing every sunken patch of earth as a possible grave, death strikes you as neither frightening nor unwelcome. 

Half my life’s in books’ written pages
Lived and learned from fools and from sages
You know it’s true
All the things come back to you

On certain nights, just to get away, to feel something – anything – be it cold or chill or danger or dark – I would sneak out of the house when everyone was in bed, and I would run – as fast and as hard as I could – running as furiously as my body would allow, pushing and daring it to give up, to take and tear me down, rip up my muscles, ravage my bones, slice through my skin and render my shell from my soul. Most of us want to run into oblivion eventually. 

It never worked. My brain gave in before my body did, and I’d return, panting and catching what was left of my breath, as much as I fought for it to leave me. In the driveway, beneath the thorny Hawthorne tree that brought us such happiness in its spring bloom, I paused, kicking off the dried and dead berries from those very blooms, now stuck to the bottom of my shoes. This was life, I thought. It always turned to shit. Nothing beautiful remained. Nothing good would last.  

Sing with me, sing for the year
Sing for the laughter and sing for the tear
Sing with me, just for today
Maybe tomorrow the good Lord’ll take you away…

Back inside, I clicked on the basement lights and put in this MTV tape, mostly to watch Madonna again. No matter what happened, there would always be Madonna. Whether Aerosmith was before or after her, I somehow always managed to see a bit of their ‘Dream On’ performance, and the song became part of my teenage life, as it did to so many others before and since. The classics never die. Steven Tyler had been to hell and back and still managed to scream and screech and work that magic like it never left him. Maybe it hadn’t. Maybe you couldn’t kill that artistic glory – not even in death. This song would live on. This music would continue to sound. This moment, shared by the audience and the listeners then and now, will keep going. There was comfort in that. Some small seed of inspiration had been dropped into my sub-conscious. And so I kept going. Not because I didn’t want to die. Not because the world wasn’t cruel and rife with misery. Not because I had any breakthrough realization. No, I kept going because… I didn’t really know what to do. And if you’re not sure about something that big, I find it best to wait and consider. One day. One night. Then another day. Another night. And another. And I made it through. 

Dream on, dream on, dream on
Dream until your dreams come true
Dream on, dream on, dream on
Dream until your dreams come true…

And so November’s days ticked away. Thanksgiving came to the Ko home. My brother and I haunted the attic and its secret passages, but it wasn’t the same without Suzie or her Dad. We sat on the stairs remembering things instead of making new memories. I never liked adding sad rooms to my memory castle, but there it is, all these years later. November tends to unlock it. I’ll take a quick look, do a bit of dusting, then carefully lock it up again. 

 

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My Halloween Costume 2018: Homage to Mr. M

Call me Mr. M or call me Skippy Day, because this Halloween I went to work as my boss’s husband, Skip Montross. You know and love him, and today I was him. From the worn baseball cap to the distressed jeans and beaded man-bracelet, I embraced all the little details that go into making one Skip M. It coincided with the Boston Red Sox parade, so it was a win-win wardrobe situation. It also brings to mind all of our Boston adventures, so here’s a linky look back:

BroSox Adventure 2014: No posts or links exist documenting this first foray into the #BroSoxAdventure, and it’s probably for the best. 

BroSox Adventure 2015: Part One, Part Two and Part Three. (Thus far, this was the only time we had a police encounter on any of our excursions, and it happened in Loudonville so it doesn’t really count.)

BroSox Adventure 2016: Part One and Part Two – in which our hero installs an air conditioning unit while Alan looks on while sipping a gin and tonic, and no one wants to dance with somebody. 

BroSox Adventure 2017: Part One and Part Two – The year I spit beer onto the human beings in front of us at the Red Sox game. I’m still ashamed. And The Karate Kid. 

BroSox Adventure 2018: The Only Part – because I took the summer off from blogging and we went later this year than usual. It was still awesome. Skip planked, even if he didn’t mean to. 

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Tiny Threads: An Insignificant Series

Scene of the next generation: parents driving their kids to the bus-stop and waiting with them. This is our state of the world thanks to murderers, child molesters and territorial turkeys. We are fucked.

#TinyThreads

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Halloween Come & Gone

Soon all our pumpkins will be as lost as the ones seen here. Personally, I’m not sorry. For most of October we’ve had our fall and it’s been a relatively fine one. After today, the eye wanders to the start of the holiday season, extended and early as so much of our world seems to be these days. 

The arrival of Halloween is viewed with mixed feelings in our house. Andy and I will arrive home after a work day and there’s usually already a group of kids waiting eagerly to demand candy before we can even pull into the garage. I despise the eager as much as I despise the tardy. This season my Halloween costume is Hateful Creature. I’ll be wearing it all year

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My Office Muse

A few people have asked what I do at my job.

This clip pretty much sums it up. Just call me Juno, your happy Human Resources case worker. 

And here’s me at a typical meeting. 

“Will you get out of here?! Men’s room, are ya kidding?!?”

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My Fellow Americans?

There were three of them and one of me. The day was pouring rain – you remember the recent Saturday when the Nor’easter was hitting – and I figured if I was going to make the Price Chopper run I’d at least have a Starbucks coffee out of it. There I sat, next to a table of two older men chatting over their newspapers. Typical upstate New York politics – they liked Trump’s policies and that’s what they were voting for, who needs another lefty! Their hatred of Cuomo. Their disdain for Delgado, and how they weren’t worried about Faso. How they felt New york City should be separated from the state because they could never beat them based on numbers.

I focused on my coffee and didn’t turn around. A third gentleman sat down across from them, enjoying their talk. One was complaining about a recent treaty that Trump was pulling out of.

“They should do away with treaties,” said the guy who was doing most of the talking, not bothering to say which ones.

Then they started talking about the wall, and how it needs to be built. “There are drones that could see for miles and know when people are coming from the other side.” Some bit about a flame-thrower I couldn’t quite make out. (Yes, a flame-thrower.) And then this: “They should build it out of a slippery material, and then have a ditch of oil, maybe two feet deep, so when they get across the ditch they will be covered in oil and be too slippery to climb the wall.”

Yes, I busted out laughing. But they didn’t notice. They were too busy solving the world’s problems safely from their vantage point in upstate New York.

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