Category Archives: General

When Winter Refuses to Depart, And Spirits Sink

Whether it’s the rotten cold weather we’ve had of late, or something deeper driving it, I’m finding it difficult to get excited, or even minimally inspired, to move on some home improvement projects. I’m equally unmotivated to get started on the gardens. Contrary to popular belief, I’m a pretty sensitive soul, and those around me have a direct effect upon my bearing and mood. When Andy is down, I tend to follow suit. In my case, it removes any sort of enthusiasm for a new couch and family room color, negates any thrill in the coming gardening season, and just makes me want to lounge around and do nothing.

To combat that, I picked up some paint chips for the family room, and browsed the Crate & Barrel catalog for ideas. I started reading ‘The Backyard Parables: Lessons on Gardening, and Life’ by Margaret Roach. And I may even shave my beard off. A change is needed. A re-boot is required. A new way…

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Not Quite Naked on A Bed

Snippets of song lyrics… wet & a mess… lying naked on the floor… they cannot see me naked, these things they go away, replaced by every day… it’s in your eyes… I want you to remind me…

 

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Holy Recap!

We made it through another Holy Week, by the Grace of God (and a little help from Jesus, I’m sure). It was a week of new Easter traditions, as the seasons slowly inched toward a slightly warmer shift. Changes were afoot at work as well, portending a very different spring/summer at the office. But let’s not talk about work here – this is the place for fun and frivolity, so let’s get back to that grind.

Spring cleaning got underway at the Boston condo, and I got down on my hands and knees to polish things up right spiffy-like. Years of wear and tear were left on two rolls of paper towels, so hopefully those of us who stay there will be a little more careful with keeping things clean (sheets included).

Cherries were forced and feet were fetishized, and the youth of America proved both hopeless and hopeful.

Hunks weren’t always of the Day, but they were represented nobly, and nakedly, by the likes of Nick Beyeler and, as befitting the season, Jesus Luz.

To make amends for the slimmer hunk offerings, I gave you this mega post of shirtless male celebrities. I think that should more than make up for it.

Finally, it wouldn’t be an Easter Sunday without that frightening Easter bunny shot taken when I was a kid. This year, however, we had a little twist, as I exonerated thirty-plus years of Easter trauma with one fell poof of a rabbit’s tail.

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Overcoming Easter Bunny Trauma

Over thirty years ago, I had a run-in with a scary Easter Rabbit. It was documented on film for all-time and I post it every year for the enjoyment of those who get a kick out of my suffering (there are many). On this Easter, Andy and I had brunch at the Fairmont Copley Plaza’s Oak Long Bar + Kitchen, so I felt safe that we wouldn’t be running into any frightening ladies or gentlemen in a bunny suit. I was wrong. Something told me to start with a Bloody Mary instead of a Mimosa, and I heeded that inner voice. Good call, as before our food even arrived I saw the big furry white thing as soon as it entered the room. It began making its way down the long bar to where Andy and I were seated. I could have beat a hasty retreat through the back door, but I held fast to my chair and willed myself the power to nod my head as it passed quickly by. I finished my drink and congratulated myself on surviving.

When we finished with the meal, I made the foolish suggestion that we walk through the ornate lobby on our way out. As we neared the exit, there stood the bunny in our path. Andy said it was my last chance. I circled the white suit, faced his vacant eyes straight-on, and said, “Would you mind if I took a picture with you? I had a very traumatic Easter bunny moment in my childhood, and I’m still working through it.” His/her attendants laughed, Andy snapped the picture, and we were on our way. Childhood exorcism accomplished. (And now I’m feeling quite empowered, so just wait until you see what I do to Santa’s lap this year…)

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In Your Dreams

On this glorious day of resurrection, a look back at what came before – particularly the in-between, better known as ‘Bardo: The Dream Surreal’. One of the most recent works to be added to The Projects page, ‘Bardo‘ was originally posted in April of 2012. I was reminded of some of its moon shots with the recent full-phase of the moon seen in these photos. ‘Bardo‘ has a few tremendous lunar glimpses as well, a perfect match to its surreal theme.  Check it out when you get through with your ham and Easter candy – it’s a puzzling little dreamscape.

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Kicking Off The High Holy Holidays As An Altar Boy

With Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter on deck, the triumvirate of Catholic holidays is about to begin. If you were raised as a Catholic, where attendance at church (and often service as an altar boy) was required on all these days, Easter was never a very fun weekend. In fact, with all the extensive long-winded masses, I dreaded this time of the year, especially when forced to serve complicated and different routines. How my heart wrenched at the thought of walking in front of all those people, trying to remember every new instruction the priests half-heartedly gave us, if they remembered to instruct us at all. Coupled with the rather upsetting notion of crucifixion (how strange that the violent stuff of R-rated films should be so easily and flippantly impressed upon us at such a young age), and the heady perfume of a hundred Easter lilies dancing behind the altar, it was a wonder I never passed out in the incense fumes. For a kid, however, especially a kid with a penchant for theatrics, that incense was the best and most exciting part of the proceedings.

I remember watching the priest pour the woody mixture over the lit charcoals, and the instant cloud of smoke that was conjured. He lifted the censer (or thurible), swung it before himself, and let it strike against its own chain three times. The smoke rose high into the cavernous church, stretching out over the pews. When I used to sit in the back on those lucky few times I didn’t have to serve, I would count how long it would take the scent to reach us, imagining some sacred pebble tossed into a still body of holy water, the ripples spreading ever outward before doubling back on themselves from the edge.

As much as I hated it, the church became a sanctuary at this time of year. The long stretch from the start of Lent to its culmination on Easter, and all those Fridays at the Stations of the Cross, somehow eased the transition from winter to spring. The new season slipped in during those nights, as our winter moon boots gave way to regular shoes, the snow finally melting mostly away before the arrival of Easter. On those dark evenings, the light of the church was a beacon of safety and warmth, the incense embraced us, and the candlelight glowed in our hands. There was something to the ceremony after all, some spiritual alchemy that occurred, even to a kid who somehow knew he wasn’t truly welcome there, and in that space I forged my own relationship with God. It didn’t involve smoke and lilies and Odes to Joy, it only required my two hands – folded in prayer – and my inner voice – raised in supplication, and hope, and love.

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For the Foot Fetishists

Foot-loose and fancy-free.

You know who you are.

And we love you for it.

 

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Liquid Lunch

In spirit only, not literally. Just an image to get us through this Monday of Holy Week. Happiness is a cocktail at the Mandarin Oriental Boston. It’s also the hand soap in their bathroom.

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Putting the Recap On

A more detailed description of my recent weekend in Boston (with two of my favorite ladies) will have to wait, as I’ve just returned home and am a bit exhausted. I’m no longer at an age where it all bounces back quickly and easily, there is more needed to start this engine on a cold morning. For now, a quick look back at the past week on www.ALANILAGAN.com, and I’m going to have to check the Archives because I honestly can’t remember what I had for breakfast this morning, much less what went on here…

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Random Fandom (Or, Pulling Obscure Items Out of My Ass For Another Post)

A few silly facts to clear up all the confusion, and start some more:

  • Once upon a time I played the oboe (and not too horrendously).

 

  • At work, I have a snow globe collection (17 in all).

 

  • I buy more bow ties than I wear.

 

  • People no longer tell me everything because they know I will call them on their ridiculousness (especially family).

 

  • My high school creative writing project was submitted to the school psychologist.

 

  • Exclamation points have no place in my professional correspondence.

 

  • It’s far easier for me to remember the events of 1993 than the events of 2013. Already.

 

  • My 20-year high school reunion is this summer. (I graduated when I was ten, Doogie Houser style.)

 

  • I abhor a sugar rim, but will accept a salty one.

 

  • Andy fears for our lives when I head into the kitchen, but I’m a pretty good cook. (It’s the cleaning that sucks.)

 

  • My co-workers wear what they want on the days I’m not in the office. (And try their best the rest of the time.)

 

  • I’m due for some serious spring manscaping.

 

  • Teabagging is fun (but I’m only saying that for the photo.) 

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Projected Inspiration

Sometimes you never know where or when the inspiration for a new Project will strike. Most of my writing ideas hit me while I’m in the shower – a rather inconvenient place to jot down a lightning bolt idea of genius, and probably the reason why I lose so many of them. Other times they’ll appear in a dream, and at 4 AM I’ll make a bargain with myself to write it down after five more minutes of sleep, and so I lose some more. This new one came on the eve of spring, in the midnight hour when by rights I should have been fast asleep, but was instead glued to the lap-top trying to program all these posts that have been appearing miraculously while I’m in Boston (magic!) It’s not something I’m going to go into now (we are, after all, in the midst of a year-long Project that is flying blissfully under the radar (1,2,3…)) and so I’ll simply direct you to The Projects currently posted here. The accompanying photo is reminiscent of ‘The Circus Project‘, even though it was actually used in ‘The Divine Diva Tour: A Fairy’s Tale‘ – which has yet to be posted here because the world can’t handle me in bad drag. Not yet. (Some projects are best left unseen.)

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These Curtains Have to Go

They don’t match the carpet.

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Snow Falling in Sunlight

Driving along Albany-Shaker Road, en route to pick up new curtains for the condo in Boston, I look out over the field to my left and see, of all things, the sun shining through a break in the clouds, surrounded by a small circle of blue sky. It is strange, to say the least, for at that same moment there was snow falling through the air, as there had been all day. I can’t remember the last time I saw snow falling through sunlight. Yes, in the falling clumps from trees, in the dislodged stuff ripped from power lines the day after – but when have you seen the snowfall associated with dark skies accompanied by a pocket of sunshine? It was both enchanting and disconcerting, a surreal moment that thrilled me in its novelty – as enchanting as it was brief – and before I could stop the car to take a picture with my phone, it had passed. Those are the secrets that make me smile. It’s never quite rendered the same in the re-telling, even if there had been pictures to prove it. But it lives inside, in the space of the soul reserved for child-like wonder and awe-invoking innocence. It’s good to witness that the universe still has the power to enthrall, the knack to surprise. It is a lovely trick indeed.

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Spring My Ass

Truth be told, there’s no reason for those of us in the Albany area to complain about this winter. It hasn’t been that bad (Boston and New York have been hit far worse), and it’s winter in the Northeast – get over it or get out. But I have to admit that it has gone on long enough. This is the point where there are bound to be a few more snowstorms (we often get snow into April here) but from this moment forward it does make one a bit crazy. So, for this first day of spring, let’s channel happy thoughts of sunshine and warmth, and ward off the efforts of a winter that only wants to linger.

Above, the dream. Below, the reality.

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