Monthly Archives:

February 2013

A New Cologne for the Restlessness of Winter

After being spoiled by Tom Ford and his decadent Private Blends fragrance collection, I find it very difficult to find a new cologne. But the winter doldrums could only be kicked by a new scent, so I made my way to Sephora to see what had come in since the holidays. Someone had recommended the new Bulgari, and though most recommendations that come from social media are met with enthusiasm then disappointment, this one was a resounding good choice. So well did it wear, in fact, that I ended up taking a bottle of it home. It’s the perfect transition fragrance from February to March – light enough to draw in the first faint breath of Spring, and crisp enough to match the chill that has not quite gone.

Continue reading ...

Happy Fucking Valentine’s Day

It’s a tradition of mine to read a little – okay, a lot – of Dorothy Parker on Valentine’s Day. It grounds me, and reminds me of all those Valentine’s Days spent without a Goddamn Valentine – but in a healthy, independent, if slightly-bitter, way. And even though I’ve had a Valentine for the last dozen years, I still read a bit of Ms. Parker on this Hallmark holiday because it never hurts to be reminded from whence we came. Besides, this one goes out to all my single friends, and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with being single. Nobody knew that better than Ms. Parker, in her own way.

A Portrait

Because my love is quick to come and go-
A little here, and then a little there-
What use are any words of mine to swear
My heart is stubborn, and my spirit slow
Of weathering the drip and drive of woe?
What is my oath, when you have but to bare
My little, easy loves; and I can dare
Only to shrug, and answer, “They are so”?

You do not know how heavy a heart it is
That hangs about my neck- a clumsy stone
Cut with a birth, a death, a bridal-day.
Each time I love, I find it still my own,
Who take it, now to that lad, now to this,
Seeking to give the wretched thing away.

~ Dorothy Parker

 
Ballade at Thirty-five

This, no song of an ingenue,
This, no ballad of innocence;
This, the rhyme of a lady who
Followed ever her natural bents.
This, a solo of sapience,
This, a chantey of sophistry,
This, the sum of experiments, —
I loved them until they loved me.

Decked in garments of sable hue,
Daubed with ashes of myriad Lents,
Wearing shower bouquets of rue,
Walk I ever in penitence.
Oft I roam, as my heart repents,
Through God’s acre of memory,
Marking stones, in my reverence,
“I loved them until they loved me.”

Pictures pass me in long review,–
Marching columns of dead events.
I was tender, and, often, true;
Ever a prey to coincidence.
Always knew I the consequence;
Always saw what the end would be.
We’re as Nature has made us — hence
I loved them until they loved me.

~ Dorothy Parker

 

Chant For Dark Hours

Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Book shop.
(Lady, make your mind up, and wait your life away.)

Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Crap game.
(He said he’d come at moonrise, and here’s another day!)

Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Bar-room.
(Wait about, and hang about, and that’s the way it goes.)

Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Woman.
(Heaven never send me another one of those!)

Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Golf course.
(Read a book, and sew a seam, and slumber if you can.)

Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Haberdasher’s.
(All your life you wait around for some damn man!)

~ Dorothy Parker

 

Distance

Were you to cross the world, my dear,
To work or love or fight,
I could be calm and wistful here,
And close my eyes at night.

It were a sweet and gallant pain
To be a sea apart;
But, oh, to have you down the lane
Is bitter to my heart.

~ Dorothy Parker

 

Inscription for the Ceiling of a Bedroom

Daily dawns another day;
I must up, to make my way.
Though I dress and drink and eat,
Move my fingers and my feet,
Learn a little, here and there,
Weep and laugh and sweat and swear,
Hear a song, or watch a stage,
Leave some words upon a page,
Claim a foe, or hail a friend-
Bed awaits me at the end.

Though I go in pride and strength,
I’ll come back to bed at length.
Though I walk in blinded woe,
Back to bed I’m bound to go.
High my heart, or bowed my head,
All my days but lead to bed.
Up, and out, and on; and then
Ever back to bed again,
Summer, Winter, Spring, and Fall-
I’m a fool to rise at all!

~ Dorothy Parker

Continue reading ...

A.K.A. My Husband

Happy V-Day to my lover and sweet-talking star-fucker Andy – cause I’m a star, and he’s the Big Dipper.

Continue reading ...

A Robe by Louis Vuitton

The title of the post says it all, and had me almost inappropriately excited when these images came out over the internet. This is a Chapman Brothers’ print for a robe from the Louis Vuitton Men’s Show for Fall-Winter 2013-2014. Designed by Kim Jones, and inspired by a trip to the Himalayas, the collection features the Chapman artwork on robes, jackets, pants, scarves, and… wait for it… matching bags. I’m not big on matchy-matchy, but there are times when it’s called for. I’m also not big on dropping a couple grand for a robe or a bag, but again, there are times when it’s called for. In reality, I don’t need these – and would never use up a birthday gift for such an extravagance (unlike the color-bleed LV coat that I passed up a few years ago to my eternal regret). These are just fun to look at, and I’m all for anything that makes it socially permissible to wear a robe to a formal function. Not that I’ve ever needed permission.

The more I look at that bag, though, the more I think that there are sacrifices to be made for such a piece of art.

Continue reading ...

2:13

If you are afraid of loneliness, do not marry. ~ Anton Chekhov

It began and ended in the kitchen. The worn yellow walls, the grease-splattered metal, the bumpy linoleum floor ~ they were the backdrop to a marriage. Though the bedroom had seen things more intimate, and the den had witnessed the casual hours of camaraderie, the kitchen was where their marriage had lived and breathed, and the kitchen alone knew their secrets.

The faucet had kept time to the years. After fixing and replacing it regularly, they realized that the drip would never stop. The pressure always built up. They had decided to live with it, alternating methods of dealing with its incessant beating. A coffee cup or glass was the best solution ~ the water dripped and silently joined its own.

She held a silver spoon, idly torturing a teabag in her stained cup. It was past midnight. A small plate of crumbs sat forlornly at his place, and the thought of him eating alone at the table saddened and repelled her. The argument started over these crumbs, led to a surly exchange about finances, and ended up in a desperate screaming match resounding the regrets and losses of the last twenty years of their lives. It was the same argument they’d always had, only the ending was different. He stopped, shook his head a little, and walked quietly upstairs. No final shout, no slammed door, but not quite a defeat. Maybe there was nothing left to say.

She slumped in the kitchen chair. This is what she did after most arguments. He would retreat upstairs to the bedroom to sleep it off; she would busy herself in the kitchen. The dishes had been washed and dried and put away, and the counter had been wiped down; only his plate was left in front of the empty chair. She would leave that for him.

A single fluorescent bulb buzzed faintly above the sink, throwing off a steadily wavering stream of white light. Snow was falling steadily outside. Tree limbs drooped in the dim distance, barely discernible behind the swirling curtain of ice crystals.

Footfalls traveled above her. He was still awake.

Had they reached, then, an impasse? Was this finally it? After everything, all the years ~ the false barrenness, the sudden happy unexpected joy of their children – not one, but two – the slow drought of their passion, the insidious hazards of their comfort ~ had it come to an end?

They were poised on the precipice of a horror so great that both recoiled at the full notion of it. Fleeting thoughts of living alone again, brief daydreams of dividing up possessions, and the heavy prospect of starting over again conspired to keep down any serious rifts. Who could get worked up enough to be bothered? When they did travel down those corridors of possibility, and the complete scenarios of how it might happen played out in their heads, it always seemed a waste to go through with it. Somehow the idea that it could all end was enough to keep it together.

And then there were the children. They were older now, but still. How to explain the years of reasons, and the reassurance that it wasn’t all bad, it wasn’t all a lie? It was just too much.

She had almost left him one day, for no other reason than it felt like the moment, but that too had passed, and when his car pulled into the driveway and she still sat at the kitchen table in her nightgown it no longer mattered.

For some time it seemed that they were on the threshold of hating each other. Every petty argument and silly fight looked to be the last. Threats were made, ultimatums thrown, and nothing ever fully resolved. They had reached points of quiet desperation, and each had entertained thoughts of the other’s passing. Nothing murderous or calculated or anything more than fleeting, but they had been there ~ a vague vista of freedom or sorrow and a worry that it might be lonely but not unbearable.

During the pregnancies, and for some years thereafter, he had been the one to take over some of the housework. He cooked and cleaned, did the laundry and the dishes, even easing up on his work hours when his time at home was proving more valuable. As the kids got older, and she felt herself less necessary – is there a colder realization? – she almost gave it all up, before getting lost in a job, in the garden, in the maddening drudge of living.

She started doing the dishes again, and other small chores around the house – little tasks that he had picked up when she was the one at work. She suddenly refused his food and his cooking, as if to say, “I lived before you, and I will live after you’ve gone.” A trifling of a stance, but it grounded her, reminding her that she could, if need be, be all right alone. She did it to remind herself that she was still there. Even after all the years of co-mingled sustenance, she would still be able to do it on her own.

She started taking care of things again, doing her own dishes, washing her own clothes, in the simple way she had learned, in the simple way she had done it before they married. It wasn’t much, but it was survival. In its first stages it was always survival.

The notion of a break rocked her less than she thought it would, less than it had when she was younger and more hopeful. A strange, matter-of-fact resignation dulled the first drops of pain, even as she knew this would be a deeper cut, a more resonant hurt.

They were still friends, and certainly they loved each other, and were perhaps still in love with each other. Both knew it was a choice. There was always a choice. Knowing this made it easier, if a little sadder. The thoughts of freedom, of possibility, even with all the responsibilities, were what they lived on, and though both questioned whether or not it was enough, they always came to the conclusion that, for now, it was.

“This is how it would be if the world didn’t rock them too much” – the paraphrased words of a forgotten novel suddenly surfaced. Would they welcome then the sudden appearance of death if it were to come?

Years ago, when the kids were still little, she realized she would have to give up her dream of a traveling companion. Even before they came, she could tell he didn’t like leaving the house. It never bothered her – she enjoyed traveling alone. All these years later though, the distant and vague ache of regret crept into consciousness, growing clearer and more pronounced as the days passed.

Though she seemed to be returning to herself as the children grew up, it was just one bit of being busy being replaced by another. She let things go in other ways, focusing on her job, on her life outside of the house. The gardens, once her pride and province, sat beneath the snowy cover, neglected and overgrown for years. At first the change had been subtle, and he trusted that she had a game-plan in mind for the landscaping. In truth, she had simply let it run wild, allowing it to grow up as it wished, mustering a few half-hearted attempts at pruning throughout the year. She was loathe to admit that in the darkest, truest part of her heart, she had done much the same with her children once they were out of the house.

At first the change had been subtle, almost imperceptible – one day a patch of unruly, unwanted seedlings from an over-zealous cup plant had taken hold, establishing its tuberous roots in a prominent and not entirely unwelcome location. She let it happen, watching the land take itself where it wanted to go. Nature herself was seeing to the pruning, ancient pine trees high in the sky cracked and swayed perilously with the heaviness, dangling their burden over the northern end of the house. The gardens lost their manicured neatness, delicate perennials giving way to the strong and stalwart, the less exciting hardiness of weed trees. The early plantings she had made in the first few years had grown and matured, and what once seemed an impossible-to-fill space was now overgrown and crowded, swallowing the house, wrapping its tendrils and applying its suckers like the tiny sprig of Boston ivy she had started in one dim corner and now overran the entire backyard exterior. It sometimes felt like it would take the whole house down.

On this winter night, she remained at the kitchen table, listening to the pine trees moaning overhead. His footsteps had stopped just before the creaking of the bed. Now there was the muffled crack of the pines, and an occasional light crash of limbs falling from the sky. The faucet sounded its metronomic cadence, the deadening march of wasted time, or a wasted life. The sly and subtle maneuverings required to make a marriage work were the very machinations that wore away the very frivolous notions that made love such a joy.

It would always be like this. She would get up the next morning as she had so many times, start the coffee, shower, and begin again. She would remind herself how lucky she was, and tamp down the unfair greediness of wanting more. He would notice the change, and gratefully accept the return to form, not realizing that he had played any part in it. She could never forgive him for that, but her own apology for her own hatred was in not saying anything.

He came back downstairs. Lifting the crumb-dusted plate, he brought it to the kitchen sink and ran a stream of water over it. The noise filled the room. There was still life here, in this room. He sat down opposite her, raising the eyes she first loved about him.

“Let’s not decide this tonight.”

She rose and went over to him, bending down and kissing him on the forehead. She pushed her chair under the table and left. He watched her go, listening to the faint familiar creaking of the stairs and the steady dripping of the kitchen faucet. The wet plate sat in the sink, another thing that could wait until tomorrow.

———————————————————————————————————-

{See also 1:13}

Continue reading ...

A Babysitting Reward

After a few hours of babysitting a pair of rambunctious two-year-olds (damn me and my stupid sugar-laden cupcake surprise), the only reward is a good strong cocktail – in this case a negroni. I have it on decent authority that when there’s another person on hand to share babysitting duties, it’s okay to have one. Not that moral judgment or condemnation would ever come between me and a drink… but it’s classier to pretend.

Is there a more perfect moment than that dusky time when you take the first sip of a drink and the world opens up all its possibilities?

Cheers.

Continue reading ...

The Morning Aftermath

God, kids get up early. And for what? They don’t have a job, they don’t even have to go to school at two years old, but still they’re up at the crack-ass of dawn, waiting for someone to join them. The problem is, when your fun Uncle doesn’t get to sleep until 2 AM because you’re screaming, he’s not going to be able to get up that early. That’s what Dads are for.

Give me a couple of hours to adjust to daylight, and then we can begin again.

That said, there’s no better way to greet the morning than with these two smiling faces.

 

Continue reading ...

All Hell to the Pope

Since when do Popes resign? Not since the 1200’s actually. But this current one has, citing old age and ill health, and if anyone buys that then they are beyond dumb. I just cringe as to what sort of atrocities he has covered up or committed that would lead to such a decision. I mean, if any entity can hide and protect its leader from all accountability, the Catholic church has proven to be it, so for the Pope to resign indicates that some serious shit went down.

I wouldn’t be so flippant or critical of a religious organization if its own head hadn’t said such vicious things about gay people, or worked to actively suppress us and the fight for marriage equality. Being that he’s done exactly that, I am not unhappy about his resignation, and I only hope the Catholic church – in which I was raised – takes this as an opportunity to enter the last century and make itself at least somewhat relevant should they wish to survive. The writing is on the wall, guys – evolve or get out of the way. As for the Pope, well, let’s hope for his sake that he’s as blameless as he pretends to be. Let me know if you see any of his former wardrobe on eBay.

And until a successor can be found, worthy enough to fill his red Prada shoes, enjoy Benedict enjoying these shirtless men. Only in the Catholic church, kids…

Continue reading ...

Week in Review: 2/4 ~ 2/10

As this big week of incongruous days begins (Fat Tuesday, Ash Wednesday, and Valentine’s Day), and we try one more time for the Boston bed delivery (re-scheduled thanks to Nemo), it’s time for a quick look back at what happened in the first full week of February. Quite frankly, it’s nice to see that our Winter is moving on – we’ve cut a wide swath through it already, and the groundhog did not see his shadow (not that that foolish beast knows a damn thing). Let’s get on with it:

  • A few quotes from some of my favorite books filled this space with some “vintage” shots of those days when I had a much smaller waist-line here, here, and here.
  • The weekend started out wildly enough, with a visit to my parents’s house and a snowy overnight with my brother and the twins.

Continue reading ...

A Cozy Night with the Twins (In My Bathrobe)

Donning our pajamas (and a terry cloth robe I found in my childhood closet), we hung out on the couch for a Friday night in the same spot where we used to watch ‘The Dukes of Hazzard’, ‘Mr. Belvedere’, and ‘Dallas’. Tonight it was a DVD – ‘Adventures in Babysitting‘ – fitting for any number of reasons.

We had but one incident of trouble, when Noah looked at me out of the blue and said, “I will hit you.” Huh? What did you just say to me? “I will throw you in the garbage!” At that my brother started laughing, but while Fun Uncle may be fun, he doesn’t tolerate that type of talk. I told my brother to stop laughing, and I looked at my nephew and said sternly (in the unmistakably-non-joking tone that means serious scary business to children and adults alike), “Don’t ever talk to your Uncle like that. That’s disrespectful. Your Uncle loves you and would never say anything like that to you. You will never talk to me like that again.” And I took him into the other room for a time-out until he said he was sorry (all of about a minute.) We rejoined my brother and Emi for the movie, at which point he promptly told my brother, “I will throw you in the garbage.” Where did he learn that??? Needless to say, the second time-out was worse than the first, and I wasn’t the one giving it.

I’m told this was the result of not having a nap. (But I did have one!) Luckily, the rest of the evening passed without incident, and we watched the remainder of the movie in relative peace. It was one of the nicest ways to spend a snowstorm – memories of my childhood intermingled with the memories my niece and nephew may one day have of their Uncle.

(As for my wardrobe, Emi & Noah didn’t seem to mind, unlike the rest of you bitches that will no doubt come for me on FaceBook…)

Continue reading ...

Weekend with the Family

Bringing it on home this weekend, I spent Friday night at my parents home, with my brother and the twins. When I arrived, the house was empty (I wanted to get there before Nemo hit) so I walked around in the quiet and surveyed what was happening to the house under the presence/pressure of the twins, starting with crayon on a number of doors.

Soon the twins returned, and it was time for a nap. That’s the kind of plan I can get behind, and I made the most of it, sleeping for about an hour and a half. Unfortunately, the twins did not follow my example, staying up with my brother and resulting in some crabbiness  later on. (Oddly enough, I can be crabby with or without a nap. I will say this: being awakened by the gleeful shouts of two younglings is much preferable to the shouts of an impatient husband.)

For dinner, I roasted some winter vegetables, and we had the asado that Dad had made earlier in the week. (Well, my brother and I did – the twins had a little rice I believe.) The light was growing dim, and the snow was starting to come down. It was time to get into our pajamas… and a robe…

Continue reading ...

Soft Focus, Soft Light, Snarky Bitch

Some days it’s best not to increase the sharpness. Some days are better left in bed. Some days you take the hazy visage with you, and the world grows cloudy where you go. Some day you don’t want to roll over and play, so you don’t. (Is this starting to feel like a tampon commercial to anyone else? Or dog food? Depression?) There – I’ve taken the piss out of my own post before it even got going, I’ve screwed myself as far as extending it into something deeper, and I’ve saved you the trouble. It was only a matter of time before my snarkiness came back to bite me in the ass. Turns out getting bit in the butt isn’t all that it’s cracked up to be.

[Insert obligatory pic of my ass crack here. And here. And here. And here… and here…]

Continue reading ...

A Little Bit of Italy in Albany, Via Utica

Matt Baumgartner has already brought bits of Mexico (Bomber’s), Germany (Wolff’s Biergarten), and England (The Olde English Pub) to the Albany area, and his latest – Sciortino’s – aims to bring a little bit of Italy, by way of Utica, to Broadway. Housed in the former Miss Albany Diner space (and right next door to the Biergarten), Sciortino’s keeps things simple and casual, drawing on Mr. Baumgartner’s Italian heritage (the restaurant was named for his grandparents) and his upbringing in Utica (there is even a Utica Special, featuring any beverage, Utica greens, your choice of riggies, and Pizza Frita).

The pizza is a big part of the place, served in ample square slices for easy take-out (two make for more than an average meal), or in a larger size for more mouths. The tomato pie (with its simple red sauce and Pecorino Romano cheese) is another Utica classic, but there are other offerings, including a white pizza (broccoli, ricotta, and mozzarella) and a BBQ pizza, along with standard toppings that you can add for an additional cost.

A few Italian staples are also on hand, from a chicken or eggplant parm dish to the aforementioned riggies (chicken, sausage, or shrimp), as well as baked hats.

At such a comfort-food place, a smattering of sweet treats for dessert is expected, and the towering ice cream sundae certainly delivered. Give me a cherry-topped mound of ice cream and whipped cream, and I’ll practically cream my pants. It’s my favorite kind of happy ending.

Continue reading ...

Bringing It On Home

The house where I grew up is filled with four people on this Friday night – the same number that filled it when I was a child – only tonight, while my parents are in Boston for the weekend, I am babysitting with my brother, and his two kids have finally drifted off to sleep. The snow is now falling steadily – the thrust of Nemo, in the limited capacity it brought to upstate New York. Still, we don’t yet know when it will stop, so there is a slight sense of tension, the possibility of being snowed in.

We watched ‘Adventures in Babysitting’ earlier in the evening, and this Sam Cooke tune is stuck in my head – ‘Bring It On Home to Me’ – not quite the ‘Babysitting Blues’, but it will do. Incidentally, the soundtrack to this movie is criminally under-rated – not just for The Crystals and ‘Then He Kissed Me’ – but also for this gorgeous bluesy tune. It puts one in the mind of the past, of lost regrets come home to remembrance. Not only about a lost romance, but about a lost love, or the ache of loving someone who simply isn’t able to return that love, not in the same way, not in any fulfilling way – and having to give it up and let it go; it’s how we learn to grow up, even if we’re in the middle of our thirties. That piano, that violin, and the longing in that man’s voice. How we beg for what is just beyond our grasp… and for what has already gone away.

My brother turns off the television and heads upstairs. I turn the switch to the last lamp and allow my eyes to adjust to the darkness. The comforting glow from the street lamps and the snow spills in from outside. It is quiet, except for the echoes of Mr. Cooke’s pleading in my head. In this house where we spent our childhoods, the Brothers Ilagan trudge upstairs, putting the place to bed until the morning.

Continue reading ...