Monthly Archives:

May 2024

Globular Glory

Everyone loves an allium. Like magic wands shooting stars of purple pixie dust, they rise quietly from the earth, soaring with unobtrusive promise, before exploding into these gorgeous balls of bloom. The stunning Allium giganteum is one of the largest in this genus, rising upwards of five feet, and topped with hundreds of tiny flowers forming a transfixing orb of purple majesty. 

I tend to admire them in the gardens of others, as once thy finish their bloom cycle the foliage does a slow die back, and it should not be removed until the bulb has rejuvenated itself for next year. An early stunner that then leaves a blank space in the garden for the rest of the summer, but what a show it provides. The garden posits such tradeoffs and the gardener must pick and choose which are worth the price. 

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#TinyThreads: An Insignificant Series

Career goals: luxuriating in bed. Also, making up words that offer new ways to do nothing. 

#TinyThreads

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Clouds of Catmint

Looking for a gentler and softer palette of colors for our backyard, I found this cooling hue of catmint flowers a good way of calming the view. Aptly named, as the cats do seem to love it based on the occasional trampling they performed when I used to grow this, catmint makes for a fine perennial border plant. Its profuse clouds of light purple flowers held above silvery green foliage is an ideal antidote from the heat of summer to come

I’m seeking out gentler and softer ways of going through this summer, and clouds of catmint may be one path to getting there. 

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Social Media Apathy

The other day I got one of those supremely unhelpful and useless notifications from Facebook indicating that I posted 16% fewer posts over the last week and had 67% less engagement. If I were an LOL guy I’d have LOL’d all over my laptop. Instead, I probably gave the briefest of chuckles, then quickly moved on. The truth is that I simply don’t care about social media, and most of what I do now is just a simple post of the current blog link you see here. A quick hit-and-run, which is why my engagement and posts are fewer and farther between these days. 

That’s been the slow trajectory of things over the past few years, and the same holds true for Twitter and Instagram and the latest Threads. I’m just not into them anymore, and it’s not a new thing. This website was around before all of them, and I enjoyed sharing with my friends and family and whatever limited audience was made aware of its existence (some of you may remember the great postcard blitz of 2003…) and it has always existed solely for my creative expression and enjoyment. That’s happening with or without social media, and given the awfulness of those platforms now, I find myself more and more content when I’m not on them. 

So, yes, FaceBook – I’m aware that I post less and have little engagement – and I couldn’t be happier about it. 

Also, I’m still here, so count ALANILAGAN.com among the ladies who are still lunching, still spilling the tea, still throwing this party… 

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Like Godfather, Like Godson

When Jaxon Layne was born, it struck me quite profoundly that I was roughly the same age that my Dad was when I was born. It offered a greater glimpse of understanding into how my father operated when my brother and I were kids, and of course that perspective was missing as we were growing up – a rather unfair thing for all parties involved. What could he possibly have made of a new baby in his mid-to-late 40’s? He had already set his ways in strict and organized fashion as any proper Virgo would have done by that age. My arrival, and the strange child I would prove to be, no doubt disrupted the regimented existence he has crafted for himself. To his credit he never loved me any less for it.

I will keep that in mind as I step up my godfathering; I tend to hang out in the background for now, as I did with the twins when they were this young, watching him from a distance. It’s a wonder to witness as he navigates his way in the world, and it calls back to my childhood, returning me to days with my Dad and my Mom, in the same house, in the same rooms, with the same slant of afternoon light…

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Messy and Moody

Grieving is messy. It follows no definitive trajectory, no tried and true path. It defies scheduled and plans and organized everything. Those stages the everyone talks about – they overlap and bleed into one another, sometimes doubling back and repeating, and just when you think you’ve gotten over the anger or the denial or the simple sadness of missing someone, it comes back stronger than before, made worse by the sustained absence of a loved one, which sometimes feels like it’s building on itself.

And you know no one wants to hear about it anymore, so you don’t bother to let anyone know what’s happening. Part of you wants to keep it to yourself anyway, the way I used to simply sit with my Dad at family functions – the two of us quietly there, but on the periphery – not unhappy about it, and never wholly part of it either. Once in a while he’d make a quip about something that was going on – always surprisingly perceptive, often quite cutting – and sometimes I’d say the thing we were both thinking and he would smile. 

No one else could understand. 

As summer approaches, I’ve been trying to get into the seasonal sunniness, but I fear losing him at the height of summer last year has tainted the season for me – just for a bit. And so I seek out ways of making this summer a little sweeter than usual – silly pink frills and party ideas – and slip into the pool when I can, because I avoided it so much last year. I still feel the push and pull of mourning and grieving, feel myself on the verge of joy then feeling guilty about it, then missing him again, not in any debilitating way, just in a dull, aching worry, like something has been misplaced, but I’ve forgotten what it is, the abstract pang of a phantom pain. 

And summer approaches again…

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#TinyThreads: An Insignificant Series

If one day there is a collection of these #TinyThreads, it will have to be a highly-curated and extensively-edited-down best-of collection, as many of them simply suck. 

#TinyThreads

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Dazzler of the Day: Michelle Williams

Completing the trifecta that is starring in the new musical production of ‘Death Becomes Her’ (see also Megan Hilty and Jennifer Simard), Michelle Williams as Viola Van Horn earns her first crowning as Dazzler of the Day. Stepping into the vaunted heels of Isabella Rossellini is no easy feat, but Williams does that and more as she adds a little song and dance to the whole magical show. From her days in Destiny’s Child until now, Williams has more than merited this Dazzling honor. 

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Garden Perfume By Way of Korea

Many a previous post have extolled the fragrant virtues of the Korean lilac, and it’s in full bloom now (at least, it was at the time of this writing before all the 90-degree days). Such hot weather spells a fast wilt-and-fade-away process for these delicious blooms. One of the penalties for the warmer weather. 

This is one of the greatest garden plants, as it works on so many levels. With proper pruning (which should be done immediately after this first fish of blooms) you can keep it a manageable size – or you can let it grow into a sizable shrub, upwards of ten feet high and round. Its foliage is beautiful, and stays green and free from most powdery mildew even in our humid summers. Its flowering season is usually later than the American lilac, offering an extended season of good scents in the garden. All in all, it gives and gives and demands just some manure every spring, and a few deep soaks if the weather is dry for a while. Highly recommend. 

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Dazzler of the Day: Joven Calloway

Digital creator, Andrew Christian Trophy Boy, and TikTok sensation Joven Calloway earns his first crowning as Dazzler of the Day thanks to his body of work. That’s all. Follow him on Instagram here.

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Valley of Lilies

Our fragrant zenith of the spring season comes as these lily-of-the-valley plants spread their perfume throughout the backyard, ,angling with the perfume of the lilacs – both American and Korean – and it’s a heavenly mash-up. It was their fragrance that actually alerted me to their early blooming season this year – everything just sort of came up at once – leaping into so much green that I didn’t notice these quiet white flowers. Like many small white flowers, their perfume is potent – one of the neat tricks of the garden, especially when you’re seeking out some extravagantly-colored and bold bloom to match the scent in the air.

The garden is rarely so straightforward.

The garden wants you to work for its rewards.

A few more shots to welcome you in to the fragrant season…

 

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Dazzler of the Day: Jennifer Simard

Joining her death-won’t-do-them-part partner in the new musical ‘Death Becomes Her’ playing in Chicago right now (and due to open on Broadway in time for Halloween) Jennifer Simard brings her scene-stealing prowess and powerhouse voice to these parts in her first Dazzler of the Day crowning. Most recently seen bringing down the house in the Britney Spears jukebox musical ‘Once Upon A Once Upon A Time’, Simard take any materials she’s given and elevates it. With ‘Death Becomes Her’, most reports are that she’s found the material to match her talent. 

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Who Are the Young Men

This piece of music from the AMC television series ‘Interview with the Vampire‘ (of which I am thrillingly enthralled at a time when not much on television enthralls me) struck me as incredibly moving, as it formed the backdrop to when two vampires met for the first time and didn’t realize they were at the beginning of a centuries-long love affair. No one knows at the beginning – we all think we do, but if we’re honest with ourselves, we never really know. Even if it turns out to last a lifetime, we didn’t know it at the time it began. All we knew was love

The first summer I met Andy wasn’t what we initially knew as our first summer – it was simply summer. Who could foresee the twenty-four years – and counting – that would follow? As much as I felt like it might be for more than a single summer, I didn’t truly know, and as much as I wanted it to be, I was only one-half of the equation. 

Looking back at our story, to the very genesis of how it began in the summer of 2000, I’m more and more touched by our innocence then, by the tenderness of how we learned to accept and love each other. Watching Andy clean the pool – something that seems like such a simple act – is a part of the daily mundane that I’ve come to appreciate as magical over the past few years, when the world has revealed itself to be so much less than kind. 

Back when we were the young men, maybe we just didn’t notice it. 

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Dazzler of the Day: Megan Hilty

One of the most beloved stars of stage and television screen, Megan Hilty has been long-overdue for her Dazzler of the Day crowning. Headlining the upcoming ‘Death Becomes Her’ musical comedy (currently in previews in Chicago), Hilty looks to add yet another defining performance to a long line of indelible performances, which includes her much-celebrated turn in ‘Smash’. Since then she’s thrilled audiences with her live performances and concerts, and now she’s set to sweep back onto Broadway just in time for the fall scary season. 

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A Spring Sunset Recap

Encroaching upon the unofficial beginning of summer – Memorial Day Weekend – the sun has finally deigned to give us some of its unfiltered power, and none too soon. Some of the plants are way behind, some are right on usual time, and only a few are pulling ahead. I’m told the lilacs in Maine should be beginning soon – a happy overlapping of our lilac season, and I spent yesterday afternoon in the pool smelling the American lilac mingling with the Korean lilac. Usually they miss each other, so this is a nice dovetailing in a spring that could use a little more warmth. On with the weekly recap

Swimming beneath the cherry blossoms.

My take on ‘The Great Gatsby’ on Broadway right now

Ferning up for your love.

A most fragrant duet.

Poised on the precipice of taking flight.

Shades of summer on the horizon.

Lilacs!

The prepopulated post -a glimpse behind these scenes.

Blue evening and moon.

Mom and I made our bittersweet return to Broadway after five years away, and it turned out to be more sweet than bitter.

Being cancelled is the new fifteen minutes of fame.

A new sensational obsession.

Come on girls! Do you believe in love?

Dazzlers of the Day included Harry Sisson, Helen Zia, and James Phoon.

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