Category Archives: General

Bejeweled by Rain

Rejuvenating our hydrangeas (which had not been enjoying the heat and sun of this past summer) our recent run of rain has lended a fresh restart to the summer-beleaguered garden. The lawn is looking lush and tall, the fat leaves actually flopping over with their fullness, and the ferns have actually held their color. It’s as if summer is determined to shine beautifully until fall absolutely insists on her exit. 

Amid the madness of Mercury in retrograde, this pretty scene of post-storm beauty is a welcome reminder to pause and take in the moment. Under the rain, I’ve been hurrying by these plants without hesitating, and I’ve been missing this show. I need to remember that it’s ok to get a little wet. It’s just water, and there isn’t much left of summer. 

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Summer Flare Through a Deluge

Yesterday’s commute home was one of the worst I’ve ever had, thanks to a deluge of rain that opened up right before I left the office. Certain parts of Downtown Albany looked like they were under a foot of water, and I prayed the Mini Cooper would glide me home. Just a few days before this I’d been perusing the local nursery, where I found the flaming celosia you see here – a late-summer show. The juxtaposition was just another product of Mercury in retrograde, or so I am telling myself in an endless quest to make sense out of nonsense. 

Watching the raging currents that were once solid streets, I once again thrilled at the newness of a stretch of road I’d driven through hundreds of times, all because of a storm. Nature orchestrates a new perspective at precisely the moment we think we’ve seen it all. Happily jolted into this new experience, I remembered to go with the flow, bend with the trees, and let the river swerve around me.

“Living only for the moment, savoring the moon, the snow, the cherry blossoms and the maple leaves, singing songs, loving sake, women and poetry, letting oneself drift, buoyant and carefree, like a gourd carried along with the river current.” – Asai Ryoi, Tales of the Floating World

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Finding Joy in the Arrival of Autumn

Next week the season of fall will officially be upon us, and while there’s always the brigade of pumpkin-loving autumn amors, I will be one of those sorry to see summer go, especially after the banner one we’ve had this year. Still, there are joys to be had in the run-up to the changing of the seasonal guard, starting with this Sedum ‘Autumn Joy’ which has long been one of the most-celebrated garden plants for a perennial bed or border. 

This is one of those rare plants that has actually four seasons of beauty and interest. In the early spring, it forms rosettes of leaves in silvery sage, with cool tones of silver dusting its edges. It keeps this fresh color as spring ripens into summer, at which point it begins to send up tight buds of promised blooms, which come just as summer shifts to fall. It will hold onto these, as they turn from light pink to dusty rose. As fall gives way to winter, the enchantment begins. 

The leaves will drop, leaving the stems naked and drained of color. The blooms will have dried to a burnt umber crossed with copper – looking like rust, and surprisingly resplendent against a backdrop of snow. These sturdy umbrels will hold any snow that falls atop their heads like caps, creating a marvelous effect in the winter – and this will last and continue until the spring finds them sending up new green stalks again. 

It is a plant I hold close to my heart because it sees us through the entire year without complaint or high maintenance demands. This particular specimen was a seedling that sprouted many yards away from its mother plant. It was actually on the outside of our fence, in the unkept and untended section of the backyard where it managed not only to seed itself, but to come back for several years until it was big enough to transplant to a prime location in the garden. I like plants that prove their worth. 

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A Monday Night Recap

Normally we’d kick off Monday morning with a recap, but things are switching up a bit as we get to it at the end of the day. That’s right, Monday’s already over, and in a period of Mercury in retrograde I am taking every little happy step with gratitude and appreciation. On with the weekly recap that includes a couple extra posts. 

It began in stormy fashion, as a recent piece on the alleged abuses and cover-up inflicted by some in the Catholic Church rekindled memories of the priest who told our confirmation class that the Bishop might touch us, but that it wasn’t a big deal.

A fig finale comes to full fruition.

Rods of gold start the September fire.

A meditation on the verge of Mercury moving into retrograde motion.

The twins and I embarked on an end-of-summer weekend in Boston. It was a history-laden voyage, but we managed to survive it and tell the tale

The day this website always goes dark.

My Dad’s 92nd birthday.

Dazzlers of the Day included TJ Collins, Rita Moreno, Zac Efron, Leslie Jordan, Kelly Clarkson, and Kathy Hochul.

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Fig Finale

We’ve had immature figs on our fig tree ever since the tree first leafed out in May – and I was so excited that we might have an early fig crop that the gods saw fit to Mae me wait and wait and wait. Luckily, the last two weeks must have triggered them into maturation, because suddenly we have the biggest fig harvest we’ve had since I started growing this hardy variety. Like many things this summer, it all happened at once, another case of feast or famine, with no happy middle ground. And so we are feasting…

I haven’t done anything special with these figs other than plucking them straight from the stem and popping them into my mouth, but there are many methods of preparation that accentuate their sweetness and add to their appeal. Honey and goat cheese is a popular combination, as is prosciutto, which is what I’ll be trying tonight – think of it as a variation on the prosciutto and cantaloupe/salty and sweet marriage. 

It will be time to repot these specimens come spring – a daunting task that I’ve been dreading, and one that I’ll put off for another year. Whenever I want to hurry through winter, I’ll try to remember that this awaits, and maybe I won’t mind taking it slow. 

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That Time A Priest Said the Bishop Might Touch Us, But It Was Ok

After reading about the additional alleged atrocities in this article on Bishop Howard Hubbard, and how the Archdiocese of New York is actively trying to suppress and prevent the release of disciplinary documents regarding Hubbard’s history, my anger and ire over the continued cover-up by the Catholic Church was reignited. Why would you want to work so hard to prevent information from being released unless it’s pretty damning information?

Let me begin by resolutely repeating that I have never been abused or harassed by any priest. I was an altar boy at St. Mary’s church for about five years. I remember the abject terror and debilitating fear I felt when my parents told me it was happening. I was so socially anxious and shy that they thought of doing anything in front of a church full of people – particularly anything where I might mess up – left me with weeks of sleepy nights and worry. When they said I had to be an altar boy, it was one of the most traumatic moments of my childhood. My mind can still replay the Saturday night before my first service. The dread of it had drained all the joy from any activities that happened that week, and I can remember being in the family room unable to enjoy the Saturday night freedom we had. Tossing and turning with fear, the night was awful, and the next morning I could barely get ready for trembling hands and a gnawing tumult in my stomach. 

I was serving with a seasoned altar boy who had been there before and knew the routine. His name was Brady, and while older, he was kind and set my mind as much at ease as it was going to be. We made it through that first service without incident, and for the next five years I would regularly serve, each time getting slightly easier, until I was comfortable enough to do it without worry. Eventually I would be showing young boys what to do for their first time. In all those years, aside from some unnecessarily-deep shoulder and neck massages from the main priest that had my brother and I squirming – but which would never be considered out of the ordinary, I never saw or experienced anything approaching sexual abuse. 

There were, however, whispers and hints that something questionable was going on beneath the surface, stories of boys who had gone out on Saturday afternoons with the priest for sundaes, something my brother and I had never (blessedly) been invited to do. Not that I didn’t like ice cream, I was just too socially anxious and shy to have enjoyed that. And what kid in their right mind wants to spend a Saturday with a priest? This was also at the tail-end of that time in America when priests were for the most part still revered and respected, a time before we knew about all the awfulness that was going in, all the sexual abuse and the church’s cover-up of it. 

It wasn’t until we were heading into our confirmation that I saw or wondered about anything. At the age of sixteen, we were thoroughly exhausted and weary of years of religious instruction, and the hours-long classes to prepare us to be confirmed were torturous. Father Gulley sat us down at a large table, and the group of us, boys and girls, had to read religious passages, talk about life, and generally still time until it barely ticked by on the clock by the door. Only when it came time to discuss the actual confirmation service did I prick up my ears, if only to not make a complete fool of myself on the altar. 

The process itself involved walking onto the altar and kneeling before Bishop Hubbard, at which point he would say a few words, and presto, we were confirmed. Oh that Catholic magic! It sounded pretty typical – the same way we had gone through learning confession and communion – one more ‘C’ word to mark the passage of a childhood spent in Catholic tradition. 

It was what Father Gulley told us at that moment which stuck with me, not for any concern or worry at the time, as he had, with his reassuring smile and gentle way, made it seem like it was nothing. He described how we would approach the Bishop on the altar, kneel down, and then the Bishop would say a few words to us. Father Gulley said he might make random remarks on how nice a girl looked, and good-naturedly rub some of our shoulders or touch us in some friendly way, and that we were not to consider it anything other than a gesture to make us feel comfortable. He said it so casually and convincingly that none of us thought anything of it. Looking back, I’m amazed at how easily we all fell in line, how none of us thought to question it, even among ourselves or privately with each other. It was so seductively executed that I never realized it until years later, when the allegations started coming out. Then it came flooding back, and I felt a sense of terror at having been so close to evil and not even realizing it. 

I don’t remember the confirmation itself. I vaguely remember kneeling before Bishop Hubbard, but not what he might have said. I do remember that he didn’t touch me, because I had been primed to detect, and ignore that, so when it didn’t happen I don’t know if I was relieved, or wondering at whether I was unworthy of such ‘comfort’. Either way, it wasn’t anything that any of us remarked upon or thought much of, and I’m guessing most of us have forgotten about it altogether. 

Today, that moment is chilling in what it might have meant.

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A Carefree Recap

The twins and I just spent our final summer hurrah in Boston, which we shall recap in a bit – for now, a recap of the previous week while we dive headfirst into September. It all begins again this month… and the shenanigans pictured on this chair are just the tip of the flaming iceberg… 

Mornings of change are afoot.

The very last day of August. 

Showing some September love.

A Friday finch party.

Another magical night begins another weekend in Boston.

My virgin manicure experience. (Spoiler alert: I’m hooked.)

Luck be a lady tonight.

A parting Boston summer shot.

Iron my ass.

Dazzlers of the Day included Conan Gray, Meghan Markle, Tom Goss, Wanda Sykes, Jodyann Morgan, and Sam Brinton

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Iron, My Ass

Ironweed is a native plant that purportedly gets its name for its strong stems of ‘iron’. This year that proves to be a misnomer, as our single specimen has about four stalks that are currently on the ground, having bent and folded beneath the heat, the rain, and their own height. Iron, my ass. Last year I recall a similar circumstance, at which time I staked them to keep the upright for their blooming season. This year I was too lazy and decided to see how they would fare on their own. Alas, they have fallen, just as their bloom season has started. 

Their strongest attribute is this glorious color – their form is rough and rugged and better-suited to a wild garden or field, neither of which we have at our disposable. For now, it will stay where it’s planted, but eventually it may be excised from the garden. 

Gardening remains a cut-throat endeavor, not for the faint of heart.

I do love the color though… 

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Friday Finch Party

Our stand of cup plants has had one of fits most impressive years of flowering, and the goldfinches of which Andy is so fond have been visiting consistently for the past month, eagerly chewing on the flowerheads and burgeoning seeds, while sipping from the little leaf axel cups that give the plant its common name. They will continue their feeding for quite some time, up to the end of fall and sometimes early winter, somehow managing to find missed seeds and sustenance even after it seems they must have exhausted all of them. 

Andy and I have watched them from the kitchen window, as they congregate in groups of six to eight, fluttering about, sometimes sharing seeds in actions that look like they could be kissing. Occasionally a hummingbird gets in on the action, floating by and stealing a sip of nectar in between the finches mad scramble for food. We will miss this scene come winter. 

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Showing Love for September

We have arrived, perhaps somewhat begrudgingly, at the start of September, and rather than be dour or sour about it, I’m choosing to celebrate and accept it. So much of life is determined by our reactions to circumstances rather than the circumstances themselves. The march against time is a futile and silly battle best left to those who want to waste it. 

September is here, and that means a little more summer, and some of the best part of fall: the very beginning. Here we see the trees just beginning to turn and burn, lighting up the sky with a brilliant canary yellow in shapes reminiscent of hearts, reminiscent of love. 

This is the month when some of us get a bolt of new energy, jolted into action by cooler nights and mornings. It is the month most kids return to school, renewing the journey toward education and enlightenment. It is also the month when this website has traditionally revamped itself, with a new season returning like a favorite (or hated) television show. We inspire all sorts of reactions here and hope to continue doing so. 

Happy September – get ready to flame… 

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One More August Day

How did we end up at the last day of August? Feels like the month just began, and now it’s over. With it goes the final full month of summer. Still, there is some more of the sunny season yet to be had, and the sort of summer that happens in September can be the best kind of summer there is. We suddenly realize how wonderful it’s been, and are less quick to complain about the heat and humidity – every day could not be the last hot day of the year. 

I see the garden centers have their chrysanthemums at the ready, with promises of pumpkins in the near future. Half of the people I know are eagerly anticipating and rooting for fall – the other half is lamenting the decline and end of summer. I am somewhere between the two, resigned and regretful and ready to start a new season. 

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Mornings of Change

While the heat of summer returned with a vengeance yesterday, the morning glories tell me it is almost time to look toward fall, as the gardens continue their gradual decline and quiet preparation for their winter nap. I will feed the potted pots we have until the first frost – our cherry tomatoes are going non-stop, the cucumbers have already provided food for salad, snack, and more, while the figs have finally started to ripen after appearing way back in June. The wait was worth it, but more on that in a post to come. As for the gardens, they had their last feeding this past weekend, as I don’t want to encourage a bunch of new growth just as they are supposed to be hunkering down for the season. 

For now, let’s simply enjoy the deep wondrous purples of these morning glories, which always come into their own as the world gears up for school again, when there’s a tension in the air, broken only by the cool nights and chilly mornings. This is the sort of weather the morning glories seem to love, and they are on a mad quest to bloom their heads off and scatter seeds for next year. Survival, and desperation, can be beautiful things. 

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Post-Birthday Recap

During the sleepy month of August, a month devoid of any major holidays, I mark the time around my birthday, hence this post-birthday recap following this pre-birthday recap. It’s like Christmas but in the summer, and, contrary to unpopular opinion, I’m not Jesus. With that disclaimer in mind, let’s recap the week…

An anemone far from the sea, and no less beautiful. 

A confession almost 47 years in the making.

The annual birthday suit post, because gratuitous male nudity is always in style. 

And speaking of gratuitous nudity, check out this moody night post

Scenes from a day of birth

Don’t sleep on summer so soon.

Interior renovation/meditation

Getting in the mood.

Wrecked by a nap.

Dazzlers of the Day included Leo Holden, Ben Cohen, Mark Hamill, Thomasa Dwyer Nielsen, Billy Eichner, and Josh Sabarra

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Wrecked By A Nap

My sweet-spot for napping is ten to fifteen minutes – anything beyond that and I am groggy and unpleasant and disoriented for the remainder of the day. Yesterday I laid down for a second and woke up two hours later, completely unsure of the day, time, or year. It wrecked me for hours, and rather than feeling renewed or refreshed, I felt completely devoid of energy or ambition, and any plans I had had for the rest of the day went by the wayside, replaced by some aimless wandering, unnecessary eating, and general discontentment. It reminded me why I don’t usually nap during the day – there’s always the risk of going too long. The disco naps of my youth, usually fitful exercises in forced futility, should have been enough of a lesson. Now when there is no disco to be had, there is even less of a reason for a nap. 

There is something about the resulting haze, however, that sparks creative rumination. Could we perhaps capture this space between sleep and wakefulness, and use it for some story or pictorial narrative? It feels like a dreamworld, nothing quite real or sure, with room for fanciful imaginings or outright illusions. That tricky in-between space is what has always intrigued me: the borders, the doorways, the corridors that lead from one realm to another. The pocket of time and space that bridges the conscious waking world and the unconscious sleeping world is not unlike the midnight hour – a crux of good and evil, light and dark, life and death. 

All of this from a nap that went on a little too long. 

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