My Christmas Wish List, If You Are So Generously Inclined

The older I get, the less I need, and the slightly-less I want. Still, who in their right mind would pass up the opportunity for gift-getting? As proof that the universe conspires to help those who ask for it, there’s currently a sale going on at Tom Ford, so any of the underwear items (size small, as they run rather roomy) found here would be very much appreciated

The latest offering from the exquisite Frederic Malle line of fragrance, ‘Uncut Gem’ has all the notes I love, and a moniker that is as timeless as it is slightly saucy. 

Mr. Turk is also offering some Black Friday sales at the moment, though that doesn’t really put a major dent in the price points, but a girl can dream. (Especially of pants like this, which, due to their slim fit, I now require a 33″ in the waist – but for all else I’m still a 32, thank you very much.) Or forget the pants altogether, as I tend to do when I’m working from home, and focus on a gorgeous shirt like this, size large.

Bonobos has the best fit for pants (waist size 32″, length 30″) as they allow for the kind of meaty caboose that holiday eating will deliver, whether we want it or not. These Italian stretch chinos in Mineral look lovely, though my heart really belongs to these velvet penguin pants

When all else fails, and you long to be someone who makes me smile over the holidays, there’s always my Amazon wish list, a hodge-podge of whimsical desires (to which I’ll be adding more affordable selections as certain smart people have indicated I’m reaching for the stars). 

What do you want for Christmas?

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The Madonna Timeline: Song #169 – ‘Beautiful Stranger’ ~ Summer 1999

{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.}

How strangely beautiful that just as our weather turns foul, this summer bop comes along with sultry memories of heat and sun, and the restless infatuations that once made up a summer night. Sandwiched between Madonna’s brilliant ‘Ray of Light’ album and the soon-to-be-stomper of ‘Music’, this William Orbit soundtrack tune set the aural stage for her ‘American Pie‘ cover and found Madonna in-between projects just as I was in-between boyfriends. 

A summer in Boston can be gorgeously disconcerting when one is between boyfriends, and shuffling along from crush to obsession to debilitating bewilderment is not made easier by the tricky heat and humidity of the season. Those dizzying days blur together now, somewhere between retail work at Structure and my first office job at John Hancock, somewhere in my early-to-mid-twenties, when everyone is allowed and expected to act the supreme fool with all the unjustified and false self-confidence of youth. Everything was stultifyingly serious and silly at once – as deadly as it was ridiculous – and Madonna decided to throw her fuckery into the ring with this song created for a goddamned Austin Powers movie (which I still have not seen). 

I immediately put the swirling psychedelic opening onto my answering machine (because we had manual answering machines back then, and CD players) and used the title of the song as my screensaver. It was the 90’s for fuck’s sake – we were doing the best we knew to do, and more often than not failing miserably. As a die-another-day Madonna fan, I felt she could do no wrong, and I fell giddily under the spell of this song, just as I fell under the spells of all those beautiful boys who crossed my path at night. 

Haven’t we met?You’re some kind of beautiful strangerYou could be good for meI have a taste for the danger…

A Boston summer night, with all its mystery and sparkle, unfurled beyond the stretch of steps that led up to the condo. Watching the street below, I paused there as the street lamps glowed yellow, lighting the ways of workers winding along their paths home, or revelers just embarking on the start of a night out. All potential opportunities, all possible love stories – because isn’t that what every night was at that point in life? Even when we pretended it wasn’t, it always was. I knew it, and I knew my heart wouldn’t stop yearning just because I told it to stop. 

If I’m smart then I’ll run awayBut I’m not so I guess I’ll stayHeaven forbidI’ll take my chance on a beautiful stranger
I looked into your eyes and my world came tumblin’ downYou’re the devil in disguise that’s why I’m singin’ this song
To know you is to love you

He said his name was Freddy. At least, I think he did. He lived just a street or two away, near an incongruous mimosa tree that lent its perfume to that strange stretch of summer, and he seemed a little too magical to be true. He passed by only in the deep hours of night, and we smiled our smiles that bordered on snickers because we both had no idea what we were doing. 

Those summer nights mixed with liquor in ways that were both wonderful and disconcerting, and on one particular late evening, we wound up on my couch, as young gents are often wont to do. It wasn’t like it usually was – rough and hungry and frantic, when two young men are so into each other they devour all in sight, driving tongues and appendages deeply and relentlessly into whatever is physically possible – this was almost like a moment of stilled time. No hurried pulling off of underwear, no rushed grabbing of backs or fronts, no quick tumble onto the bed while still joined desperately at the mouth. Instead, we sat silently. No one moved. The air felt still too. Even with the open windows everything had stopped, stilled like a movie moment out of ‘The Matrix’. 

It was the strangest thing. He didn’t want a drink. I didn’t want another. We simply stayed sitting there, not even talking, and no one moved to break the spell. It was impossible to tell if this was weird for him too, but he remained silent, and so it became less weird for me. I already half-believed he wasn’t really there.

You’re everywhere I goAnd everybody knowsTo love you is to be part of youI pay for you with tearsAnd swallow all my pride

Ta-da-da-da, da-da, da-da, da-da-da-da-daBeautiful strangerTa-da-da-da, da-da, da-da, da-da-da-da-daBeautiful stranger

The dim light of a lone lamp near the door was all that glowed in that moment. A little more came from the street outside, and the uppermost floors of what was then the John Hancock tower sparkled in the distance. Afraid to seek out his eyes and be seen in return, I slowly unbuttoned the top few buttons of his shirt and slid my hand across his chest. Was he even real? And if he was, what did he even want? I straddled him decisively then, to pin him down in case he was a ghost. He didn’t squirm or try to get away – instead our lips just barely touched, our noses only lightly grazing one another, and never before or since have I had a wisp of a kiss that left me wondering whether or not it had actually happened. Hovering over him, thighs upon thighs, I watched as he slowly unbuttoned the top few buttons of my shirt, and then leaned his head into my chest. 

I pulled him closer into me, my chin resting on his soft hair as he breathed in the scent of my skin. We were impossibly young and saw no reason why it wouldn’t last. 

He leaned back into the couch then, keeping his eyes down and his gaze averted. I wanted so badly to see him and to look into his eyes, but I followed his lead and didn’t pry, gently maneuvering off of his lap. Aside from our shirt buttons, our clothes were all still on, all still intact. We hadn’t even mussed our hair. 

If I’m smart then I’ll run awayBut I’m not, so I guess I’ll stayHaven’t you heard?I fell in love with a beautiful stranger
I looked into your faceMy heart was dancin’ all over the placeI’d like to change my point of viewIf I could just forget about you
To know you is to love you

In all the nights and years that came before and would later ensue, in the many men and people who would occupy my bed and my body, this would be one of the few times I felt so intensely attuned to someone that it was a spiritual moment of connection which transcended the physical world. It wasn’t because of who he was, it wasn’t because of who I was, it was simply because of some magical alchemy that brought two people into each other’s orbits for a night, when a mimosa tree sprinkled its ripe perfume onto two young men who couldn’t quite bear the idea of being alone at that hour, on that street, in that summer. 

In the following weeks, I would watch for him, but never very seriously. I didn’t seek out where he lived, or haunt the general vicinity like I would do for others. Maybe our schedules were off-kilter, maybe his nights weren’t his alone anymore, maybe he never existed outside of the conjured longings of my overactive imagination. Whatever the case, I would never see him again, and I would never really look. My heart didn’t want to find him, and my head knew that to see him again would break such a perfect spell. 

You’re everywhere I goAnd everybody knows
I looked into your eyesAnd my world came tumblin’ downYou’re the devil in disguiseThat’s why I’m singin’ this song to you
To know you is to love youYou’re everywhere I goAnd everybody knowsI pay for you with tearsAnd swallow all my pride
Song #169 – ‘Beautiful Stranger’ ~ Summer 1999

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Royal Holiday Tradition

Ever since receiving this as a birthday gift from a few years ago, my Thanksgiving scent has been ‘Royal Oud’ by Creed – a woody and peppery oud that appropriately tips its hat to the gourmand goals of the holiday. The House of Creed also provided my wedding day fragrance (‘Green Irish Tweed‘) as well as the signature ‘Aventus’ to which I finally succumbed and use as an office fragrance. ‘Royal Oud’ is the more challenging and complex of the trio of Creed offerings on my scent shelf, and I have grown to love it in the cooler months. It’s cozy and spicy and warm, like a favorite sweater that some people love, and some find too much. 

Whenever I slip into a period of self-doubt, when insecurity rears its relentless head, I put on a jacket, and a spritz of good cologne, and I feel a little bit better. It puts me back on track – a realignment that reminds me of simpler times, when problems could be so easily solved by a change of cologne or clothing. 

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Heeding the Holiday Start

En route to Amsterdam for our family Thanksgiving dinner, we finally gave in to one of the Christmas music channels on Andy’s radio, and so we spent the ride there and back immersed in our first brush with holiday music this year. It was time, and we needed a little holiday lift. On this day of gratitude, which also marked the anniversary of Andy’s Mom’s passing, we have learned to be appreciative of the little graces afforded in life

A bright flash of lemon cypress and the mottled leaves of ivy among these scarlet kalanchoe blooms provide a lovely holiday entry point – proof that powerful colors and simple plants will always be better than any artificial tinsel or electric lights. I will try to take that lesson with me throughout the season, turning to the natural world for tranquility when all the human-induced holiday madness threatens to overwhelm. 

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Happy Thanksgiving

There is quite a lot I have to be thankful for this year, and most of it is right here in this post. 

Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours – may we love and accept and embrace each other in the year to come. 

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A New Kind of Party

This used to be one of the biggest party nights of the year. It kicked off the holiday season, and we always spent it in our friend Bob’s apartment overlooking Washington Park, where his gregarious collection of friends and relatives provided a happy and convivial atmosphere for good times to come. For many years, this was our tradition, and when Bob moved I begged and pleaded for him to keep it going, which he did for a bit, but eventually he got out of the party game – a trendsetter for the dying tradition

At first I missed them – the parties, and the people, and the chance to reconvene just as the most wonderful time of the year was getting started. It was a tradition that had become comfortable, that allowed for a brief bit of drinking and debauchery to varying degrees, which we would then feed and quell the next day at Thanksgiving dinner

After a few years, however, I understood Bob’s giving up the party ghost. It was a lot, and I can’t imagine being saddled with the clean-up following a party on a day like Thanksgiving. Tonight, I remember those days, and I celebrate the traditions we have now.

For instance, today I made the traditional candied yams, as well as this new pumpkin tres leches cake, and a couple of dips for appetizers. Andy made a last-minute supermarket run, and then we were both in for the night by 8 PM. We watched a bit of the ‘A Christmas Story’ and now I find myself writing this good-night post in the attic while the light of a few candles flickers cozily nearby.

Twenty years ago, we’d just be arriving at the party at such an hour, the chill of the evening only partly kept at bay by whatever fanciful coat I found to display. Now I’ve traded in my velvet jacket for a sleeveless sweatshirt and shorts, and it’s a trade-off that feels surprisingly good. 

For all you revelers still carrying the torch, party on friends – be safe, be yourself, and be sure to enjoy every moment. 

 

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Lurkey for the Turkey

It is once again Turkey Lurkey Time, celebrated in such posts as this (in which I actually caught a Boston turkey on camera). That means we are posting this silly Broadway holiday classic, a version from the appropriately-titled film ‘Camp’:

That’s all. 

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Rush of Madness

Before we dive into the maelstrom of the holidays, let’s have this moment of calm – and let’s see if we can return to it whenever the season threatens to overwhelm. The music of Phillip Glass often provides a mesmerizing opportunity in meditation, his notes flowing like water, spilling over one another in gorgeous wave upon wave, rushing and then slowing the way a stream does depending on rain and snow melt. It is music for contemplation, music with which to pause and breathe. 

Once tomorrow arrives, there is no turning back – it will be the high holiday season, and the rush of that rollercoaster to Christmas will bring us down that first steep track with a whoosh. The chain reaction of holiday magic will be set into motion, and there will be scant few moments in which to find true peace and comfort. That seems the antithesis of how this season came into being, and so I will strive to find a way to honor its humble and more meaningful origins. It begins with a post like this, and a quiet morning with just a little piano music to ease into the day. 

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Rose Hips and Autumn Leaves

The holiday season slowly unfurls in this lovely piece entitled ‘Autumn Leaves’ by the brilliant Vince Guaraldi, who wrote the classic themes to the Peanuts holiday features. This selection is a lovely entry into the season, transitioning from autumn’s splendor into hints of the holidays to come. In our haste to hurry into all things Christmas, we sometimes forget that there’s a full month of autumn still to celebrated. 

There are also moments of quiet beauty, as found in these rose hips, that shouldn’t be discounted in all the bombast and hoopla that is currently building – little bits of nature showing off when the world has written her off. Such gems are there to be found if one adjusts expectations.

While I will always love the blooms of a rose, and the fragrance that often accompanies them, I also appreciate the rose hips when they ripen into such glory. It’s a forgotten stage of the rose’s life-cycle, and as we move toward winter it’s wise to celebrate such simple joys. When the snow arrives there will be enough time to conjure and create the artificial means of getting through the winter. For now, I slow down to listen to the music of autumn, the wind and the rustle of the leaves… 

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Tuesday Bluesday

Named for the color of the sky in these shots rather than any Tuesday blues sort of thing, the turn in weather of late has suddenly thrust us onto the verge of the holiday season. These two tall evergreens are already decorated with hanging pinecones, the very best sort of decorations when it comes to the holidays: natural, simple, and easy. Every year I strive for this trio, and almost every year I fall short. Or rather, I fall into excess. I used to do too much, I used to force things, and I used to make life much more difficult. The last couple of years I’ve slowly worked out of that, choosing to be selective about commitment and social events, and to enjoy the days as they arrived. Being mindful is something that works well for that, and for a lot of things. 

This holiday season is about to commence, and I’m going into it with the same goal. 

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A Place of Beauty and Respite

When I started this website way back in 2003, I wanted it to be something different from everything else that was online. It was supposed to be a repository of my creative work, and a little corner of the internet that celebrated beauty, in all its myriad forms. As the years passed, and social media took over, I kept to my original intent. That became easier as most of the surrounding internet clutter was turning more and more vapid, dumbed down by a culture that no longer bothered to proofread, that didn’t value words, that feasted on emojis and memes, never wanting for something that might take time to digest and appreciate. Our technological leaps and bounds brought us speed and connection, and no one bothered to wonder at what cost, to slow it all down and pause, just for a moment, on how fast too fast might be. 

For the most part, the key to the longevity of this site has been in keeping things light and frivolous, even when the world turns dark and serious, as it has done more and more often these past few years. Yesterday, for instance, as referenced in this morning’s recap, there were worldly events going on that went against the silly post I’d planned – which was going to be a second celebration of our first night out in years, showcasing a pink velvet jacket and jewel-encrusted necklace – but that felt off-tone and out of taste. 

The world has been awful before – and it will be again. That’s why this site always goes dark on 9/11. When you’ve lived through that, or something like a worldwide pandemic, you add it to the days you remember, and you seek out intervening moments of beauty to act as a balm upon the hurt. It can never really heal or erase the pain, it just makes life a little more bearable. 

I’ve always wanted this site to be a glimpse into that kind of beauty, or a little wink of whimsical enjoyment, but sometimes life steps in and demands a more sobering assessment. This post, a pause filled with greenhouse cyclamen and the quiet contemplation of a Monday afternoon, is my way of honoring the difficult days behind and ahead of us.

I’ll put that velvet jacket on again one day soon, and get back up to the business of being fabulously frivolous, but for now all I have is a few flowers.

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Dazzler of the Day: Patrick McNaughton

At the helm of the gloriously queer-positive endeavor that is DandyQueerArt.com, Patrick McNaughton has been providing “an ever-evolving online magazine, gallery, and shop recognizing the creative achievements of the world’s best lgbtq+ erotic artists.” Curating and cultivating a vast collection of queer artists and their artistic output is no small task, and McNaughton is adroitly navigating those challenging waters on a daily basis. It appears to be working, as evidenced by their recent Pajama Party for the Dandyland Queer Holiday Gift and Erotic Art Fair. Bringing a sex-positive attitude and unabashed authenticity to the world is the greatest way we have of connecting us to each other, and McNaughton brings that idea of connection to everything that DandyQueerArt celebrates. Check it all out here, and then give McNaughton a pat on the back for being named Dazzler of the Day

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A Melancholy Recap to Start the Holiday Season

We have arrived, already, at the week of Thanksgiving. The past few days have brought their fair share of heartbreaking incidents – another mass shooting at a gay club in Colorado that killed at least five, a Brandeis shuttle bus that overturned killing at least one, and my own Auntie Naty – one of the most memorable and challenging members of my Dad’s family, passed away in the Philippines. All in all, not a great week – and now we are supposed to give thanks. Well, in gratitude may we find grace, and peace. 

It began in gratuitous and innocuous fashion, with this shirtless Zac Efron post, rekindling the glory days of shirtless male celebrities

A green matcha morning eased us into Tuesday.

Another return to form was found in these shots of a shirtless Andrew Garfield for GQ

Gone majestically to seed for the season.

A hydrangea bloom illustrates the juxtaposition of new and old – the crux of where some of us currently find ourselves. 

A peek at some fresh succulent inspiration.

Candlelight provides the place and space for calm, if you let it. 

Commencing the sparkle sequence, and setting up for the holiday season. 

Andy and I made our first return to the social scene in three years with a night out at The Pride Gala 2022: The Rainbow Age ~ A New Era of Visibility. I wore this shimmering outfit

A dreamy cream sauce by Andy

This batch of ham salad brought me back to Saturday nights of gambling with my golden girls

Blue clouds beyond the Hudson River.

Going down the Boston memory lane with empty rooms of a young heart.

Dazzlers of the Day include Dave Woodman, Joe Phillips, Priya Nair, Greg Fox, and Nick Jonas.

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Empty Rooms of a Young Heart

It should have felt cold and empty because that’s literally what it was. Not a couch or a bed or even a chair offered a place to sit, and the little cot I’d hastily assembled had already fallen apart, leaving only the thin mattress on the floor. Our newly-purchased Boston condo was entirely unfurnished – not even a log left in the fire-place, as if we were visiting some place the Grinch had just ransacked – yet in this sparse space of echoes and emptiness I couldn’t have felt warmer or more at home. It was December 1995, and I was finishing up the last few days of retail work before returning home for Christmas. Finals had been completed the week before, and as I stood at the kitchen counter looking up at the then-John Hancock tower trinkling in the distance, I’d realized that the dream of me living in Boston – the one I’d had since visiting Quincy Market a decade prior – had finally come true. 

Dinner, and breakfast alike for that matter, consisted of the bagels procured from Finagle-A-Bagel, and a carton of orange juice. There weren’t even glasses in the kitchen, so I drank straight from the carton like some heathenish bachelor, tearing off bits of bagel since there weren’t knives or forks or plates either. A roll of paper towels stood on the counter, while a plastic shopping bag served as the makeshift garbage. It sounds ridiculous, but I was happy and, looking back on the moment, full of hope. Life hadn’t really happened to me yet; the heartaches I tended were largely of my own making, and I leaned into them, hungry for something to feel, hungry for something to signify that I had arrived. That something was ill-fittingly placed on somebody – and his name was George. 

When I set up the general theme of fire for this fall season on the blog, I thought I’d be burning up all the demons and ghosts that had been haunting me from years past – those who had done me wrong, and those from whom I couldn’t break free. Yet when I looked back and re-read my journals from then, and faced my part in things without trying to salvage an image or reputation, I realized that some of the fires I started would have to consume me. This may be one of those stories. 

It had been about one year since I met the first man I ever kissed, and in that year the entire experience had worked to harden my heart against any other men, or women, who happened to cross my path. My defenses were up, as much as I wanted someone to walk beside. I couldn’t see then that I was in desperately in love with the idea of being in love, obsessed with the whole artifice and atmosphere of being in a couple. At such a young age, that betrayed itself in wildly-vacillating mood swings, where I would push people away as badly as I wanted them near me. Figuring that if love was meant to be, anyone who was worthy would see through it and accept me for the wounded little porcupine I was, prickly spikes and all. As a nineteen-year-old young man in Boston, I was also aware of the power that youth held, the sway and swagger it could command, and I was not above using this as leverage whenever the opportunity presented itself. If that meant playing the twink card in situations where gay men might offer something of value, why wouldn’t I work every available angle?

On this brilliant fall day, practically hours after getting confirmation from my parents that I could begin looking for a place to call our own in Boston, I found myself in the South End, traipsing along Tremont to the cluster of real estate offices that were suddenly hustling and bustling with the bubble that was just beginning to grow. It was early afternoon, and the receptionist looked at who was available, casually saying they would call someone. So it wasn’t fate or destiny that brought George into my life, it was his unfortunate availability at being the only agent on duty for my questionably-fortuitous arrival. 

With the know-it-all swagger of a college student, coupled with the unearned pride and power of being able to seek out a new home, I followed him into his office and sat down across from him, his desk between us. 

(When I thought back to our meeting later that first week, I would want it to mean something more than a mere transactional set of unfeeling circumstances. I wanted it to have the alignment of stars and planetary symbols, I wanted it to be the beginning of a romance that would change my life. I didn’t want it to be such a casual and nonchalant nod from a receptionist who said you were the first available and then you appearing as some secondary haphazard quirk. Certainly not the stuff of destiny or dreams coming true. It wasn’t the way I wanted a great romance to unfold. But that’s the whole point isn’t it? It wasn’t what I wanted. In those days my relationships, or non-relationships as they too often were, were solely about what I wanted.)

He had a sign for Tea Dance which I looked at a little too long. He watched me and gave me a quizzical look, as if to say ‘What do you know about tea dance?’ I looked at him differently after that, wondering immediately whether he was gay. I couldn’t tell then, not anymore than I can tell now, whether certain people were gay, and since it never really mattered unless I was interested in them, it’s never really mattered. On that day, at that moment, with this man who gave off a charming smile whose intent I could never quite determine, it suddenly and intensely mattered. 

It was a little lifting of the veil, a parting of the curtain that let us both know the other knew: the secret codes of gay life in certain places back in the 90’s. He winked at me then, and rather than return it with a smile or a laugh for a nod, I snarled. Wolf-like, menacing, and more than an eye-roll, it was the look of disgust, perfected with the smug cruelty of someone who thought he could not be touched, who would simply and outright refuse to be touched. If only I’d known how well it would work…

We talked price range and location and ideas, and my sarcastic quips and testy tone, not entirely-uninspired by Linda Fiorentino’s wondrous anti-heroine in ‘The Last Seduction’, seemed to keep him slightly off his seductive real estate banter. I was not to be charmed or had for the price of a peanut. Still, there was something charming that went beyond the sale before us, and he unexpectedly jumped up and said, “Let’s go look at some places!”

I was not dressed or prepared or ready for such an outing – my backpack and sneakers were not what I envisioned wearing when seeking out our future Boston residence, but George didn’t notice or mind. He said we weren’t going far, just a block or two away, and after crossing Tremont, he wrangled a set of keys out of his pocket, and brought us into a little place on a nearby side street. We ascended to the second floor, and after the dim hallway, the light of early afternoon flooded the place in shocking relief. A small place, indeed, it had some charm to it – an exposed brick wall in the little kitchen, where a depressing bouquet of dried flowers hung desiccated from a string. He walked through the space, pausing to let me take it in, and I made a few cutting comments, as was my wont for so many years of my life. He was alternately puzzled and amused, and as was my other wont in life, I assumed he totally knew it was an act. Break through it, kind sir, break through it. Break through to me…

I said we could keep this in mind, and the only thing I started thinking was how nice it might be to live so close to this guy who was starting to warm to me, and starting to turn on his real estate agent charm, but I hadn’t fallen so foolishly or deeply under a spell that I would say yes to a home without seeing our other options. 

We made a date to set up viewing some other places, and a few days later I returned to Boston. It was further into the afternoon than the day we first met, an hour after most people had finished work and school. The days were getting darker earlier, and there was a chill in the air. I entered his office in a slightly better wardrobe, while he was in jeans and sneakers. I must have made some critical commentary, as he surveyed the moment and asked if I was always so… and here he paused to struggle with the best word… snippy

I’d been called many things in my life up to that moment, and as my brow instantly furrowed, a smile also formed at the same time. Taking it in, I balked a bit, saying I preferred the term ‘prickly’, and he quickly tried to explain himself. It wasn’t necessarily bad, and then he said he was going to start calling me Snippy. 

Is there anything more endearing that being nicknamed by someone you secretly adore? It didn’t matter what the nickname was – it was a moment of intimacy, a little shared something that no one else had to know. Without hesitation, I wore the badge of Snippy as proudly as I wore Aloof and Arrogant and Asshole. Underneath both our stances was another wink, as if we were both playing a game now, and having some element of fun. We walked to his car and he brought us to the second property – a large, labyrinthine floor-through that had been divided into a number of smaller sections and rooms. While it had the most space of any place we would see, it was parceled off so much that it felt claustrophobic. Interior rooms with no windows were not for me. Snippy reared his head again. 

The onset of evening. The cold air. The second fall in which I was falling for some guy I barely knew. Our final place to look at was located right on the beautiful border between Copley and the South End, looking onto the Southwest Corridor Park and up at the John Hancock Tower. This was Braddock Park, he explained, and we climbed the stairs into a stalwart Boston building that had stood there for far longer than the two of us had cumulatively been alive. What history had such a place seen? I thrilled at the notion. 

We walked up to the second floor, and he unlocked the door, switching on the overhead lights as we entered. The hardwood floors instantly warmed the place with their amber hues, and a marble fireplace mantle held pride of place in the middle of the room. Walking to the front pair of windows, he showed me the view, then took a few short steps into the little kitchen area and its window that perfectly framed the Hancock Tower. I don’t know why, or whether this is just rose-tinted hindsight, but it felt like home. That part had nothing to do with George, who was ambling into the bedroom.

He struggled to find the light, but once he did he said this room, and its lovely bay window, was probably one of the main selling points of the place: a floor-through with windows in front and back was not as common as one would think. The bathroom was there, with a half-wall of exposed brick, lending a rustic warmth to the suddenly cold evening. At all turns, I felt a coziness here, a sense of refuge from the wilderness of the city. 

We went back into the main room to discuss the merits of this place, the chief one being its location. In close proximity to the Green and Orange lines, and right near Copley Square, it was as near as I could get to where my Mom had taken us on trips as kids. And throughout it all, the main rule of real estate repeated itself in the back of my mind: location, location, location. George was in agreement as well, and whether he had intentionally saved the best for last, I wouldn’t know, but Braddock Park was the chosen one, at least for me. My parents would have to visit for the final say, and then it was a done deal. A few weeks later we closed on it, and George left us a gift basket with pasta and tomato sauce and breadsticks. For something that would come to mean so much, it all felt like it happened too easily and flippantly, as though we weren’t making a decision that would be grandly fortuitous for us, as though I hadn’t just found a home. 

It also felt vaguely anti-climactic when George invited me to his office Christmas party a few weeks later. I honestly don’t remember how that came to be – whether it was a casual comment he made the last time we saw him, or whether some generic postcard from his agency arrived at the condo a few days later. It didn’t matter – I took it to heart, and with a new place in Boston to call home, I wondered if I couldn’t somehow get a partner out of the deal too. I mean, he did leave a gift basket – do all real estate agents do that for their clients? (Spoiler alert for idiots like me: yes.)

Looking back, I don’t know why I should have been so affected by George. He was affable and decent and cute enough – but what was exceptional about selling someone some property? I think it was just the excitement and glamour of being in that city, at the ripe age of 21, and wanting to taste all of it, all at once, with such passion and intensity that anyone in my periphery would have been subject to such burning desire. Luckily for all involved, I was too chicken-shit to do anything, other than giving him a copy of ‘The God in Flight‘ as a Christmas gift at that office party at which I drank too much and was summarily dismissed (which was entirely appropriate). It took me a few weeks to get over him – this man who really didn’t deserve my love, any more than he deserved my harsh jabs and vicious barbs – and a few years to see my folly and nonsense in the whole situation. Chalk it up to the silliness of youth. I vowed to do better. If I wanted to find someone to share a life with, I couldn’t afford to be Snippy anymore. My heart understood; my head would not be so quick to set down its weapons. 

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Blue Clouds Beyond the Hudson

Behold the Hudson River in a glorious bit of resplendent afternoon sunlight. It is backed by a bank of blue clouds that serve to set focus on the lone tree holding onto its leafy carriage – the magnificent willow tree you see in the forefront. With its scene-stealing chartreuse coloring, it recalls its early spring incarnation, and I like the parallel poetry inherent in such a play.

Some Sunday blog posts are all about the visual at hand. No more needs to be written. (Especially after writing all this last night.)

  

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