• home
  • bio
  • press
  • writing
  • coaching
  • patreon
  • glossary
  • talk to me

horizontal with lila

33. the vanilla episode: horizontal with a monogamist

in episodes on 04/05/18

Joe in his natural state: Dadding.


horizontal with lila

horizontal is the podcast about intimacy (sex, love, and relationships of all kinds) that’s entirely recorded while lying down. Many episodes are recorded at Hacienda Villa, a sex-positive intentional community in Bushwick, Brooklyn. The rest are recorded while horizontal … elsewhere.

Joe:  I was, I was casually dating, a couple of different people, at the time. It was a week later— we’d been kissing for a week. Just, here and there. And I told her that, I said, you know— you know I, I wanna be open about this, ‘cause everybody, everybody, all the— ladies involved knew. That I was not monogamous, with them. And I said, “You know, I’m, I’m kind of, seeing, you know, a few other girls as well” … and she said, “Okay. It’s fine.” And I said, “You know, I just wanted to make sure that you’re— that I’m open about that.” She said, “Yeah, I don’t have a problem with that. But… you won’t be seeing me then.” An’ I went, “What?” (Lila giggles) And then she said, “You won’t be dating me, then.” I said, “What do you mean?” And she go— said, “Well… I mean, I don’t mind if you date other girls, that’s, you know, you’re … I wouldn’t stop you from doing that, but … I don’t even see anything wrong with that, but ….. I don’t want to be dating somebody, who’s dating somebody else other than me. That’s just. That’s my preference, so… That’s fine.” And we talked about it a little more and … you know, in, years and years of polyamory, an’, and also, you know, relationships— unless I was in a committed relationship with somebody… (Joe laughs throughout the next part of the sentence) nobody had ever said that to me. (Lila laughs) Especially not a week in. And I went, “Uhhhh… okay!” And I broke it off with the two other girls.

Lila:  You just felt… a surety about Emma?

Joe:  The first time I ever — walked into her apartment, I knew I was in trouble. First time I ever saw her I knew I was in trouble.

Lila:  That’s not really trouble, is it?

Joe:  Isn’t it? (laughs)

Lila:  It’s more like … mmmmm, exactly what you want in your life? I don’t know! (chuckles)

Joe:  Well, y’kno— I knew that I— didn’t feel like I w— I didn’t feel like I was in a place  to be meeting somebody who I— felt— for … no logical reason, that strongly about that quickly and that— you know. I wasn’t in a good headspace for it; I wasn’t in a good, you know, I just wasn’t, wasn’t prepared for that. And when I look back on it … I realize that, I started falling in love with her the first time I ever saw her. And, I d— was not prepared for that. I was not emotionally ready; I was not— mentally ready.

*

Lila:  So many people that I know … believe, that it’s simply not possible … for one person to be everything….. that another person needs in a relationship.

Joe:  I think, that if you’re idea of, someone being everything that you need in a relationship is that that person is everything you need … in life, in terms of human interaction, then those people are correct.

Joe:  But I don’t think that that’s—                                                       Lila:  That’s not what they mean.

Lila:  That’s not what they mean, they’re all people who have friends and close ties with their — colleagues and … families—

Joe:  Then maybe they—                                                                         Lila:  Chosen families.

Joe:  Maybe they can’t.

Lila:  (little pause) Maybe they can’t.

Joe:  But I don’t think any human get to speak for all of humanity.

Lila:  No, of course not, and they’re not purporting to. It’s just … it’s very refreshing s— for me to hear your perspective … particularly— you’re not in NRE. You’re not experiencing New Relationship Energy.

Joe:  No!

Lila:  This is, what, nine years in, to your relationship?

Joe:  Yeh.

Lila:  Yeah, this is—

Joe:  Nine years in, we met in 2008, it’s 2017 now. We… moved to Chicago together. We moved to Georgia together. We moved to Maine together. We got married…

Lila:  Bought a house, had a child.

Joe:  Yeah, married in 2014, had a kid in 2016— no, we got married in 2015… so I mean, we were together, and we— we started living together. I mean, hell, we met, summer of 2008… late summer of 2008, and … she spent the first semester of 2009 in Italy, came back in May, and by, no later than August, we were living together. And we’ve been living together since, either July or August, I think August of 2009.

Lila:  So did she feel the same way when she saw you, initially? You said she ignored you for a long time.

Joe:  She ignored me ‘cause she had a crush on me. She’s shy. I later found out.

Lila:  Hm!

Joe:  But I don’t— I don’t know if she felt quite the same way that I did…

Lila:  Until later.

Joe:  I knew that something was different. I knew that there— like there was was a passion for this person who I didn’t even know, that, was not, reasonable or rational… but I didn’t identify it for what it was until later on— I didn’t realize that I had fallen in love with her, until she was already in Florence.



Dr. Joe.

Welcome back to horizontal, the podcast about intimacy that’s recorded while “the opposite of vertical.” I believe: when we make private conversations public, intimacy becomes contagious.

In this episode, I lie down with my closest friend from high school, Joe McCue. Beloveds from that era of my life are few and far between, and I’m only in touch with a handful of them today, which makes my friendship with Joe all the more precious to me. Joe and I went to an arts magnet program at Gibbs High School, called Pinellas County Center for the Arts, or PCCA for short. His major was Visual Art; mine was Performance Theatre.

Joe is now an osteopath in Bangor, Maine, where we recorded this episode. Bangor was the second stop on my 10,000 mile cross-country road trip. This conversation marks the first episode release from the road trip and tour, which I dubbed horizontal does america.

In October and November of 2017, I, a couple of suitcases, and my recording equipment circumnavigated the United States in a Honda Civic — in order to lie down with people in their homes, in their cities.

I first went to Burlington, Vermont, where I failed to record an incredible conversation with the relationship coach Lola D. Houston – SIGH. You can read that behind-the-scenes story in this missive.

Stories from the road (like the mishap with Lola’s episode), behind-the-scenes photos (like my horizontal portraits across America with pumpkins and monuments), and discounts on live events shall be yours when you sign up for the mailing list! You can do that right now! Below! Or, to the side!

In the first part of our episode together, titled “why we never had sex: horizontal with my dearest high school friend,” Joe and I talked about our high school lives, Joe’s bad first time, the title of this episode — why we never had sex, teaching his sister to read, and the stay-at-home Dad dream. He also points out the fact that he’s been getting horizontal with lila since the 90s.

In this second half of our episode, I tell Joe a minor secret, we debate whether missionary can be a kink (who do you think took which side?), how joe met his wife, the paper anniversary, and how such a radical person ended up monogamous and happy about it.

For my sweetest, most vanilla episode yet, I invite you: to come lie down with us.

Joe said, “Be a pumpkin.” Do you think I took direction well? I consider this outfit to be Hipster Snow White, but every time I wear it, Kenneth says, “Sexy Minion.” You must decide for yourself.


If you enjoy lying down with Joe and I, become a patron of the horizontal arts! Patreon is an innovation in the life of the artist. It’s a website that crowdsources income on a monthly basis. It can make it possible for me to continue creating independent, uncensored, ad-free homemade radio.

Become a Patron!

There are lovely perks when you become my patron. For instance, for $25 a month you’ll receive recorded love poems. You’ll also get two tickets to a live recording of horizontal, quarterly lullabies, an invitation to my secret FB group, and a post of what I call GPG: Genuine Public Gratitude (or not! If you want to remain a private patron, I shall honor you privately!) There’s loads of other rewarding rewards as well!


Links to Things:

Patron of the horizontal arts!

My horizontal does america tour, on which I recorded this episode!

The Center for Erotic Intelligence (website of the sex therapist Mal Harrison)


Show Notes (feel free to share quotes/resources on social media, and please link to iTunes, this website, or my Patreon!):

iTunes link: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/horizontal-with-lila/id1238031115&ls=1

website link: https://horizontalwithlila.com/

Patreon link: https://www.patreon.com/horizontalwithlila

horizontal with joe mccue in Bangor, Maine


[5:46]

Lila:  And what I’m remembering now is going down … to the causeway maybe? Not all the way to the beach? And just parking, and, and I think cuddling, and and—

Joe:  In the truck bed.

Lila:  Yeah.

Joe:  Yeah. (beat) And nothing happening. Just cuddling and talking.

Lila:  Just cuddling and talking.

Joe:  I told you— I’ve been getting horizontal with Lila since the 90s.

Lila:  (laughing) That’s right!

Joe:  In the truck bed—

Joe:  On the second floor of—                                                           Lila:  Outside of—

Joe:  — building 4 outside of LaMore’s class.                                          Lila:  LaMore’s classroom.

Lila:  Must have been other places, too.

[7:18]  Lila makes a minor confession to Joe.

Lila:  Can I confess something to you which I don’t think I’ve ever told you, about that? (pause) So… I think the reason, the— there were multiple reasons, it was multifaceted, why I didn’t … step into romantic space with you… or … see if it could go that way, and, one of them was that I … until … college, really, I felt pretty ashamed of my nose—

Joe:  (quietly) I knew that.

Lila:  And I had been … really … battling … very difficult self-esteem—

Joe:  (softly) Yeah.

Lila:  — in middle school and high school. And I thought, “oh God, if we get together, we’ll be the nose couple…”

Joe:  Yeah, ‘cause my nose isn’t small.

Lila:  “That’s what people will say about us!” (Lila laughs, Joe cackles)

Joe:  That’s so vain!

Lila:  (cracking up) Isn’t that so awful?!

Joe:  It was better if it worked out that way. I didn’t push it either.

Lila:  Oh my God.

Joe:  I don’t know why I didn’t. Um. I remember talking with you; I remember you confiding in me about your feelings about your nose and I remember telling you that … I thought that was silly. (laughs, then Lila laughs) That I, that I recognized your feelings being real but that I didn’t think anybody else saw it the same way that you did.

Lila:  And I’m sure I appreciated you saying so… (chuckles)

Joe:  Maybe, I dunno.

Lila:  But, yeah. The nose couple.

Joe:  (under his breath) The nose couple. (at regular volume) Yeah, ‘cause I have nostrils that can f— each of one, each one of which can fit a fist. Aquiline, we’ll call it— it’s an aquiline nose.

Lila:  (decisively) Yes. (beat) I’ve been seeing my nose in places lately … like Sofia Coppola. (pause, then giggles lightly)

Joe:  I can see that. Yeah, I mean there are, there are lots of— lots of pretty people who have noses that are similar to your nose.

Lila:  And it’s really not that bad. It’s, it’s—

Joe:  (emphatically) No, it’s not.

Lila:  It’s it’s—

Joe:  Your nose fits your face—

Lila:  — not —

Joe:  — and you have a pretty face.

Lila:  — very… yeah, I mean, the … I— I think it was to the point where it was really— it was really body dysmorphia.

Joe:  Oh, absolutely was. I mean, you thought you had a Jimmy Swaggart nose… or something. Or like—

Lila:  The i— like, I thought I had a Wicked Witch of the West nose…

Joe:  No, you thought you had— you remember, um, did you ever watch the muppets? The original muppets?

Lila:  (beat) Ye-eah.

Joe:  You know the blue eagle? (Lila giggles) It was like that level of body dysmorphia.

Lila:  Yes, yes.

Joe:  You thought that’s how you were walking around; you thought that’s how everybody saw you.

Lila:  Yeah, absolutely. Like they couldn’t see my face, for my nose.

 

body dysmorphia (noun) = when one person’s visual perception of some aspect of their body or visage is outlandishly out of proportion with what other people see, engenders obsession, and requires exceptional measures to hide or correct.

 

[10:48]  After Joe’s bad first time, when did sex become good?

[12:57]  Is Joe kinky at all?

[13:12]

Joe:  I don’t like any kind of violence. Or anything that resembles it. (Lila hm’s softly) Like, if the other person in, involved, is into it then I can, I can get into some light hair pulling or some light spanking, but, it’s not really my thing. And I don’t like violence directed toward me.

Lila:  Mmhm.

Joe:  Which also probably goes back to Jodie….. She used to, um… you know, she used to get upset at me … for … I dunno— m— st— no reason that I could ever really understand, and, sometimes it would be like, in in the ons and offs of making out, sometimes it was just— talking. And would just like — ball up her fists and pound on me. Not like in my face but … You know, it was— I would describe it as physically abusive.

Lila:  Definitely. (pause) Acting out rage that—

Joe:  Mmhm.

Lila:  She didn’t know how to channel or process.

[14:30]  How Lila is becoming more and more kinky.

Lila:  I’m becoming more and more kinky, as you might imagine or really, it’s not that I’m becoming more kinky but that I’m having the freedom to express it and experiment and see … what I really like.

Joe:  Yeah.

Lila:  And having that in a really open, welcoming, nonjudgmental atmosphere, so it’s just kind of— unfolding. Continuously unfolding. But my very first lover, was kinky.

Joe:  Hm.

Lila:  And really, I feel like, molded … All the things that he did to me are still things that I want today.

Joe:  Well, that makes psychologic sense.

Lila:  And, look for in a partner as— acts that they enjoy. And want to do to me. And I, enjoy doing them back, as well. I don’t know how much I did with him… Which is, switch behavior… being able to, to enjoy switching from a dominant to a submissive— role, or from a top to a bottom position…

Joe:  Yeah, I do like, I do, like, that. I like being able to … being able to switch.

Lila:  (pause) Kink is really broad.

Joe:  Yeah.

Lila:  There’s so much that it encompasses and I’ve asked, you know, several horizontal guests to try and— have a crack at a definition of kink ….. But kink changes as the, as the times change, because it’s (Joe mmhm’s) related to norms.

Joe:  Yeah….. I mean … why can’t it just be: kink is what gets you off?

Lila:  (medium-length pause) I suppose because if what gets you off is mm-missionary style —

Joe:  If that’s what gets you off —

Lila:  — vanilla sex —

Joe:  — that’s your kink.

Lila:  Well it’s not a kink.

Joe:  Sure it is.

Lila:  A kink would be a non-normative way. That’s the normative way. It’s not bad; I love missionary sex, I love it. (giggles)

Joe:  But if you really need — missionary sex, right, if you need to have it through a hole in the sh— in the sheet, that’s kink. Even if it’s normative. Right, norms can— norms don’t have to be— just because they’re the— they’re commonplace that doesn’t mean that they’re, in any way actually ….. (sighs) That doesn’t mean that they’re not artificial.

Lila:  From —

Joe:  You know what I mean?

Lila:  — my understanding at the moment, which is evolving, and of course, incomplete: that would be a fetish. The fetish is the thing that you need in order to get off.

Joe:  Yeah.

Lila:  A kink is just something you enjoy. That is probably in— of the non-normative variety.

Joe:  But again: probably. I would hook on that word. I would argue that kink is just what gets you off. Your kink is what gets you off. And, you know, I’m not a very kinky person. Like I’m not a very— most of the things that, that I like are— you know, given … given my openness to stuff, really pretty … pretty vanilla.

Lila:  I think kinky people like being kinky because there is a taboo in it.

Joe:  I agree.

Lila:  So if you made it, non-taboo, if you say, “Ah, it’s anything. It’s anything that you like.” (giggles) That takes that away from them.

Joe:  But I think—

Lila:  From us.

Joe:  I think that opens it up— even more than it takes away. Because it allows more people to— be okay with exp— you know, if your expression of your sexuality is ….. you know, whatever it is, anything, any way that you express yours— if any way that you express your sexuality is okay, that, and if, and if the idea—

Lila:  Any way is not ok.

Joe:  If— well, no. You know what I mean. Um. There are, there are personal harms and safety things that are unacceptable. But… um, except in cases of consenting adults. But, if— your expression of your sexuality, and another adult’s expression of their sexuality …. are, you know, extremely vanilla or, extremely rocky road. (Lila giggles) You know, why can’t that be your kink, why doesn’t that actually u— I mean, if kink is about embracing the different ways that we can be sexual, and be okay being sexual and not be shamed for the things that we like about being sexual, and the ways that we like to be sexual, then, defining it against the norm … vilifies the norm and that’s not— that to me isn’t in the spirit of it. You’re creating an other, you’re other-izing.

Lila:  Mmhm.

Joe:  You’re just counter-otherizing. Which is my argument for why kink is what gets you off.

Lila:  I hear you.

[20:15]  Joe on judgment and his position as a doctor.

Joe in his doctor getup, with Finn.


[21:29]  The story of how Joe met his wife.

[24:07]

Joe:  You know, when you’re behind a bar, of any variety, you’re job is to flirt with everyone.

Lila:  (decisively) Yes.

Joe:  That’s your job.

Lila:  Definitely.

Joe:  Right? And I’m good. At flirting. (Lila giggles) It is one of my only true, like, native talents. (Lila laughs) It’s one that I have genetically passed on to my son—

Lila:  Yes indeed.

Joe:  He. Is. A flirt.

Lila:  Iii noticed.

Joe:  Yeah. And it’s native. It’s in his blood.

[24:36]  How Joe met his wife, continued.

[27:24]  What happened when she insisted on monogamy?

[30:49]  How does Joe manage a strictly monogamous marriage, being such a radical sort of person?

[31:15]

Joe:  I do think most humans base-line is probably polyamory, and that—

Lila:  Multiple loves, or nonmonogamy … some form?

Joe:  Some form. I don’t know. Multiple loves. Probably, I think is what is probably the baseline. Maybe mo— maybe nonmonogamy as well, I don’t know… That’s a little more complicated.

Lila:  I, I see it as the umbrella.

Joe:  Yeah, I mean tha— and it is, it’s a, it’s a spectrum of stuff but… when you know that the person you’re with … can be everything that you … need in a partner— even when they’re failing … and when you know that you can be everything that your partner needs in a partner, even when you’re failing … and when you know that you can talk with each other, and, when you know that, even when things are feeling really shitty … that— person— can just light you up….. In a way that other people— can’t quite. And even when … you’re the sort of person who can get— you know, who can get brightened up very quickly and very easily and by lots of people, you know, you’re a people person … I don’t know, she— there’s something about her that noone else has. Annnd… you know, I wake up, every morning, and I— choose to love her as though I didn’t— as though I had another choice. But I do, I consciously choose it, and I also don’t think I have a choice!

Lila:  (pause) Hm!

Joe:  (pause) But I keep myself in the illusion that, my choosing … is my choice… because it is, even though I don’t have— I don’t really have another choice. I would, I would … (big inhale) If she left me, I would never stop loving her. (big exhale)

Lila:  Mal Harrison, who, is a, sex therapist … she has the Center for Erotic Intelligence — says that erotic intelligence is the ability to hold simultaneous truths… and that’s what that just reminded me of.

Joe:  I think you can, you know, like I’ve— I have, been deeply in love with two people before.

Lila:  At the same time?

Joe:  At the same time.

Lila:  I haven’t.

Joe:  I have. And I absolutely think that’s possible.

Lila:  I believe it’s possible for me too.

Joe:  I don’t think, that I, could ever love someone as deeply as I love Emma. (Lila hm’s) There’s somet— there’s just something different. Something’s different. I don’t know if it’s chemical, I don’t know if there’s a soul thing or an— magnetic thing, I don’t know, what it is. (beat) And really I don’t care.

[34:39]  Grand gestures Joe made for his first anniversary. Below: the paper anniversary drawings (excerpts from the full album).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


[36:54]  Lila marvels at the idea that one person fulfills everything that Joe needs in a partner. (She’d like to find that person, herself.)

[41:37]

Joe:  So, things haven’t always been easy. And in relationships, they’re not… but… if you don’t expect them to be easy all the time… and you’re willing to talk through things, and you’re willing to be wrong… and you’re willing to stand up when you believe you’re right. And you’re willing to stand up when you believe you’re right and still … be wrong … you know? (beat) You got all that and you love somebody, what can’t you fix?

Lila:  (long pause) Well. (chuckles) We’ll not try to answer that question, but—

Joe:  Yeah, there are answers to that question I guess. (Lila laughs lightly) I mean that— you get what I mean.

[42:29]  How did Joe develop his communication skills to be able to talk about difficult or uncomfortable things?

[44:35]

Joe:  I do my best to listen, and I do my best to listen openly … and I do my best to communicate … precisely ….. and to communicate honestly … and I do my best to communicate complicated things. And I do my best to, listen, to complicated things and to see the complication. You know, and I. I just don’t have the ability to see things in black and white, I don’t have it. I can’t— I can’t do dichotomies. My Gifted teacher in second grade told my mom … you know, she, she said, you know, Joseph doesn’t, doesn’t see things in black and white. He sees things in grey. And… I’m going to push that in him hard, I’m gonna push that quality in him … and my mom said, “Oh. Ok good.” And she said, “No, I don’t think you understand. I’m going to make him a huge problem for you. And I’m just being honest about that with you. So that you know. And I will help you to deal with that. But I’m going to make him a big problem for you.”

Lila:  (pause) You remember her name?

Joe:  Marilyn Jacobs. I’ve tried to find her; I haven’t been successful.

[46:12]  Are there any unexpected challenges for Joe about being a father?

[47:10]

Joe:  He’s 18 months old, I don’t know if he has slept longer than, 5 or maybe 6 hours at a stretch without waking up, at least a little bit, in his entire life… but I fall in love with him every day. Even when he’s being a total shit.

Lila:  Hm.

Joe:  (beat) He is the most beautiful thing in the world.

Lila:  I think that’s a … a particular kind of heartbreak when you pass something you really don’t want onto your children— like my tendency, you know, towards melancholy… My mom’s not happy I got that. (giggles lightly) You know?

Joe:  But you’re gonna pass stuff on and some of it’s genetic and some of it’s not, and, you know, and this is something I’ve picked up from my Dad: If your kids are better than you are … then you’ve done your job. And if they’re better off than you are … then you’ve done your job … and sometimes, they’re not going to be, annd, that’s not your fault.

Lila:  Well, I don’t like that, because … that means if they’re not then you haven’t done your job, and that puts a… kind of an unfair onus on people who do their best, and wind up with a, mm— (big sigh) an aberration or some, someone who … harms—

Joe:  But you missed, you missed the last part of what I said. Which is that sometimes they’re not going to be. And it’s not your fault. Because you’ve done everything you can…. You can do your job and do it well, and still fail. Whether that’s in parenting or anything. You can’t foresee everything. We’re not omniscient; we’re not omnipotent.

[49:37]  Joe tells Lila a story about a cute girl, a car accident, some pain meds, and his parents.


Listen on Google Play Music
List on Spotify

http://directory.libsyn.com/episode/index/id/6555354

Become a patron of the horizontal arts, by supporting me on Patreon, a website for crowdsourcing patronage! Patronage allows artists like me to make independent, uncensored, ad-free work, schedule recording tours, and devote my time to creating more horizontal goodness, for you! Becoming my patron has delicious benefits, ranging from quarterly lullabies to bonus episodes to tickets to live recordings to handwritten postcards! You can become a patron for $2 a month on up, and the rewards just get more sumptuous.

Liked it? Take a second to support horizontalwithlila on Patreon!
Become a patron at Patreon!

subscribe for perks!

blog + exclusive subscriber bonus content

yes!

« 32. why we never had sex: horizontal with my dearest high school friend
34. that was a big cucumber: horizontal with a gay reiki master »

Lila Donnolo

Lila Donnolo is an Intimacy Specialist. Tell Me More…

deepen your intimacy

subscribe for all things horizontal

yes!

listen to the latest in sex-positivity

Become a patron of the horizontal arts!

Become a patron at Patreon!

or offer your patronage in one fell swoop!

come lie down with us

  • Apple PodcastsApple Podcasts
  • Google PodcastsGoogle Podcasts
  • SpotifySpotify

Follow me, we’re lying down.

instagram

horizontalwithlila

Actress. Writer. Podcaster. Lover. Intimacy Specialist … 70+ exclusive podcast episodes for you on Patreon!

Lila
Dear One, I hope this makes you laugh as much as Dear One,

I hope this makes you laugh as much as it made me laugh. 

Laughter in the midst of grief is so good. As good as tears. Different sides of the same emotional release.

My dear friend & brilliant psychiatrist-writer, writer-psychiatrist Dr. Owen Muir, called to check in on me. We joked about my plan to write a scathing critique of this looks-so-nice-from-the-outside, for-profit Assisted Living facility my mom had been living in for a year. (This is not a joke.) 

Owen suggested I write a scathing critique of everything, and then used the phrase “the terrible consumer experience that is death.” 

He said I should write it. I said he should write it. 

So he called me and we recorded it. Together.
Because this is what we do. 

Big Love,
Lila

To listen to the 7 minute recording, tap the Substack link in my bio, or type this link into your browser: horizontalwithlila.substack.com
My new friend @latonya.sunshine78 , a visual artis My new friend @latonya.sunshine78 , a visual artist and educator whose work I *deeply* admire, gave an Artist’s Talk on Friday at the conclusion of her @floridarama.art exhibition, and I got the chance to see it, and hear her speak passionately, eloquently, humorously, lovingly, about her art and the process of making these large-scale mixed media collage works that, for lack of a better art-world term, I personally think of as Very Mixed Media.

If you swipe through to the last slide, you will see the very first time I caught glimpse of her work, long before I know who the artist was, weeks before the exhibition opening, when it had likely just been hung up, and I brought @mrghyseye to experience the immersive exhibit at FloridaRAMA and we both fell in love with the respective pieces behind us. We thought we matched the pieces so well, in both vibe & style, that we had best selfie with them!

And since I follow FloridaRAMA so closely here on IG, when I saw that the official exhibition opening was happening, I made it my business to get there, on my @radpowerbikes @stpeteradpowerbikes ebike, in my ball gown skirt. I brought two Toastmasters friends, Lena & Steve, along.

You can see from the second photo that I was so moved by Latonya’s work and beautiful energy, that I spontaneously Kissed Her Hands (!!!) Later I was a tid bit embarrassed, like ‘really Lila? She does not know you!’

But she does now. And I can tell you that Latonya is a source of unending inspiration, just by being who she is, and working the way she works.

I was deeply moved by the way she weaves objects, and memory, into a visual tapestry, and the way she listens to the objects until they Tell her how they want to be incorporated, so moved, in fact, that I brought her something back from my father’s funeral, and from his dilapidated house. I will be honored if those memories make their way into a tapestry of hers.

Recently I heard this quote. (Do you know who said it?) 

“Use your suffering. Don’t waste it.

I promise I will use it. I promise not to waste it. It will make its way into all of my art, of every medium. And maybe, it will make its way into the art of others, as well.

❤️‍🩹
I’m recovering from a speech heartbreak. I gave I’m recovering from a speech heartbreak. I gave the most beautiful speech of my life last week. It was about my parents, my father’s sudden death, my love, the love of my life. And it is gone because I forgot to turn on my microphone! 

It’s not completely gone. I did find an app transcription service that can read lips. So I have the transcript, but I am devastated to not have the video as I thought it was going to be something I would send to the @ted curators to follow up on my finalist win in 2021. I was going to send it to X, Y, Z… ( And @imranamed )

And the ephemerality of this is really with me. Sometimes creativity, even visionary creativity is a mandala. 

If you’ve ever seen the monks with the sand, pouring a mandala, they put such meticulous precision, such effort, such focus into it. And when they are finished, they gaze upon it… and they sweep it away. Somebody said that my speech last week was a mandala, and I was like, “Yes! I know!” 

Many people have said, “If you can do it once, you can do it again. And I know that this is true. 

As a person who has been creative my entire life, I know that this is true.

{To WATCH the whole speech or READ the full transcript, go to: 

horizontalwithlila dot substack dot com

Or click the link in my bio, bb}

And then go out and make some art.
“Fashion” I think I’m gonna need to add a B “Fashion”

I think I’m gonna need to add a Bowie album or two to my burgeoning collection… 

Which ones are your favorite? Let a girl know in the comments.

Art by @mollymcclureart 
Leggings by @l.o.m_design 
Vampira lipstick by @thekatvond 
Sneaks by @adidas 
Photo by @samia.mounts
Here’s how it starts: Dear Young Man I Dated in Here’s how it starts:

Dear Young Man I Dated in 2016,

I have something very important to say to you, and it isn’t ‘I told you so.’

It is this:

Politics are about people and the planet.

Every single political issue is about people, or the planet. 

Politics do not equal some ideological, intangible thing. “Politics” are real things with real consequences to real people. Probably people that you know. Probably people that you love.

When you say, “I’m not political,” what I hear is, “I do not actually care about people other than (a handful of) the ones I know personally.”

To read the whole letter, tap my Substack link in bio.
Brought my mom to @floridarama.art for the first t Brought my mom to @floridarama.art for the first time so she could experience something different than the view from her couch, and she “didn’t like it”? It was “esquisito”?

#okboomer 

BeforeI went up to NY for the funeral, I did wind up telling her that my father died. I was worried she would be devastated and she would develop what they call “increased mental state,” but that wasn’t the case. Mostly she was just sad for me. 

I’m not sure if she now remembers that it happened.

To be honest, sometimes I don’t exactly remember that it happened. I have his wedding ring and his glasses and the prayer card on my nightstand but still it’s sometimes unreal.

I don’t want to bring it up all the time, but I do like having physical reminders. 

And though I don’t want to wear all black all the time for months on end to show that I’m in mourning, it feels good to put on my morning armband… even, and maybe especially, because it’s just a little bit too tight. So I really know it’s there.

Because the grief is always there even when I’ve forgotten about it.

So is joy.

Hold your people close and tell them, 
if you love them, 
tell them.

#mourning #arttherapy #floridarama
A poem of grief and wonder-ing that I wrote years A poem of grief and wonder-ing that I wrote years ago, and could have written yesterday.

You can read the whole piece on my Substack (with proper syntax). 

Substack is where I put my tenderest thoughts and deepest writing. If you want to, you can become my patron there. This would move me very much.

Link in my bio.

#grief #griefislove
Went to my father’s funeral, but couldn’t wear Went to my father’s funeral, but couldn’t wear black *all* weekend.

Dreamy roses are red @selkie tournure skirt giving me life. Fascinator by @babeyond_official
Are you a member of the Dead Dads Club? Only two Are you a member of the Dead Dads Club?

Only two criteria for membership!

Any Dad will do. Stepdads, Granddads, Poor Dads, Rich Dads, Fun Dads, Un-Dads.

But for real.

I thought for sure my Mom would go first. I mean, I moved to Florida because she has dementia and she is dying.

“Plot twist,” somebody said.

That’s funny.

I actually mean that. I’m just too tired to laugh today. It takes too many muscles.

My mom is in an assisted living facility, on Hospice Care, can no longer stand up from a seated position on her own, and is worried about the stuffed cats we gave her possibly being dead because they ‘have a soul and they used to meow and now they stopped.’

The staff has been putting down food and water for them and every time I drop by the stuffed cats — and the food — are in a different place in the apartment. So that’s good. They’re still alive, you know. And the facility is still keeping her. Alive, you know. And putting down real food for her stuffed cats.

“What’s the harm?” they said. 

No harm, I say. She wasn’t going to eat that, anyway.

To read the entire essay, to subscribe, or to become s paid subscriber and be part of my art, follow the Substack link in my bio 

horizontalwithlila dot substack dot com

#deaddadsclub #deaddad #grieving #sickmom
Try not to forget, okay? Belt @l.o.m_design Bow Try not to forget, okay?

Belt @l.o.m_design 
Bow @riskgalleryboutique 
Earrings @artpoolgallery 
Top @forloveandlemons 
Photo @samia.mounts 
Art @verticalventures
I never wanted a child. So the universe gave me I never wanted a child. 

So the universe gave me an 84 year-old one. 

We are the playthings of the gods.

I have cleaned up her urine. I have cleaned up her shit. I have changed her soiled diaper. I have used a q-tip to put medicine in tender places that I never wished to see, because there was no one else to do it.

What’s that they call it in the Bible? Smiting? God smote him? Smited him? Smit him? In my bitterer moments, it does feel as though I’ve been smote. In my better moments, it’s simply the part of my story where Timon & Pumbaa sing the “CIRRRRCLE of LIIIIIIFE.”

{You can read the rest of the essay on my Substack. Link in my bio. Thank you for being a witness.}
I’ve just learned that today is International Me I’ve just learned that today is International Mermaid Day!

Thanks @jujubumble 

📸 @wildartistryphotography 
💄 @mrghyseye 
✨ Me
📖 Gift from @kristianndances 

#internationalmermaidday
My Mom is dying. Fasc!sm is on the rise. A small g My Mom is dying. Fasc!sm is on the rise. A small group of evil corporate overlords is trying to Handmaid’s Tale us. My brilliant, funny friend @synchlayer died of bladder cancer at age 49.

I’m out here buying pretty things on the internet. 

I have no regerts.

This will be an essay mostly in photos. I am very, very tired. 

February was: 

setting up temporary-house in FL

gathering 95% of my possessions from 4 places in NY (thanks Kenneth, Deniz, Marghe, Owen!) and two places in Los Angeles (Thanks Adam M. & Samia!) 

driving a 12-foot box truck from NY to Baltimore to Savannah to FL (mostly with Jon! thanks Jon!)

shortly thereafter, flying to L.A. and, while packing up, the remaining 17% of my possessions, managing to see as many people I love as humanly possible (for someone who is slightly manic and rather time-optimistic) — which is, honestly, rather a lot of people, if I do pat myself on the back… myself— and then rushing back to St. Pete (thank you friend for flying me home; you know who you are) because mom went into the hospital again…

FOR THE REST OF THE ESSAY, TAP THE SUBSTACK LINK IN MY BIO, bb. 💋 💋
Proud to Protest today.
Falling more in 🩷🧡💛🩵💙 with St. Pete!

Happy International Women’s Day. 

May each of us born to a woman, 
raised by a woman, 
nurtured by a woman, &
 f*cked by a woman 

CHOOSE to SHOW WOMEN the RESPECT and CARE that we deserve.

#internationalwomensday2025 #stpete #resist
“What a year January has been. 

My dear friend’s sister died by su!c!de. My dear friend lost his home in Altadena and had to evacuate the fire with his family, including his 92 year-old grandmother. My dear friend is dying of cancer in New York. (In his 40s.) The br*ligarchy rears, fasc!sm festers, and every tr@ns person, woman, and human with even mildly uncertain imm!gration status in the United States is, rightly, terrified. 

Here in Florida, my mom fell on her face right in front of me at church last week, on the threshold of the ladies room (busting her upper lip) and had to go to the E.R. where her CAT scan and her hand xrays came back negative but it turns out she has…..”

You can read the whole piece on my Substack- link in my bio!
In March, 2019, my friend @stevenmdean (remember h In March, 2019, my friend @stevenmdean (remember him from horizontal with lila episodes 82. 200 dating profiles, & 83. you do not have voting rights in this startup relationship?) teamed up with an experience designer to create an event they dubbed The Love Immersive, a “10-hour exploratorium-style foray into the 5 love languages.”

In Steve’s words: 

“I teamed up to architect a choose-your-own-adventure interactive journey through the languages of love. 
Spanning every floor of a sprawling 6-story arthouse in the heart of New York City, and co-produced by the creative arts group Moontribe, Love Immersive attracted over 450 attendees who came to explore love through the nuanced dimensions of touch, words, service, quality time, gifts, and more. 

We invited over 50 volunteers and practitioners of different love languages to showcase their creative capabilities in an evening of self-discovery, secret missions, hidden rooms, wandering wizards, art installations, and live music.“

I was one of the 50. 
They gave me a closet. 
A closet.
This is not lost on me.

That was all the space they had left, apparently. And I was determined to make good use of it. I turned it into a cozy nesting pod with blankets and pillows and two sets of listening devices, and I recorded this 11-minute meditation for anyone who stopped in, so that they could take a break from the glorious menagerie for a few minutes. And reset.

In the closet.

#immersiveexperience 

LISTEN ON SUBSTACK! Link in my bio!
Busy? Low on bandwidth? No time to read the whole Busy? Low on bandwidth? No time to read the whole piece?

TL,DR: Don’t ask. OFFER.

Don’t ask. Offer.

Honestly though, the whole piece is worth reading, and, of you’re grieving, sharing with those who ask you if there’s ‘anything’ they can do.

Link to my Substack in my bio.

I love you.
I grieve with you.
I love you.
Think of this as a candy conversation heart that s Think of this as a candy conversation heart that says “READ ME”.

“Annie Lalla, the love coach I would trust with my love life, who explains the unexplainable in ways that break open my head and my heart, once told me of smuggling love. Some people do not demonstrate love in ways that we at first recognize as love. She spoke of becoming a Detective on the Case of Love, noticing where a partner might be smuggling morsels of it. Refilling your water glass while you’re busy writing, perhaps. Going out to the car early to defrost it before you get in. Things like that, and things far less legible.

When I first courted her for a couple of episodes of horizontal with lila, I asked, “How do I smuggle love?” She replied immediately that I don’t seem to smuggle at all; I just come right out with it. Make like confetti. Festoon a person. She said loads of people are more reserved than I am because they believe compliments, effusiveness, and praise, once offered, lower their social status. She said I don’t care much about that, because it’s more important to me to let the person know.

Let the people know.

We are all going to die. And it seems like most of the time, it will be a surprise when. What does status matter, really? Really really.

The fact that I will express my love with a freeness is a thing I love about myself even when I don’t love myself.

So sure, I don’t need a holiday to express my love — which is one of the main annoyances I hear bandied about near February 14th — “I don’t need a holiday to tell me to tell my wife I love her!”

Okay. But setting aside a day for a thing can certainly help, right?

Atonement.

Independence.

Rights.

Holocaust remembrance.

If anything, Valentine’s offers us that cultural pause in the middle of an unfavorite month, a will-we-make-it-through-the-winter, hope-our-stores-last, do-we-have-enough firewood, dear-God-don’t-let-me-freeze-to-death month that says, in candy-colored suspended animation:

Think about love, will you?

What kind do you have?

What kind do you want?

And:

Now what do you want to do about that, sweetheart?”

Read the whole piece on my Substack, darling. Link in my bio.

P.S. I love you.
Read this if you love me: “february, the month Read this if you love me: 

“february, the month you’re supposed to be in love”

https://open.substack.com/pub/horizontalwithlila/p/february-the-month-youre-supposed?r=m6nsi&utm_medium=ios
“This has been a terrible no good very bad super “This has been a terrible no good very bad super sucky year. For moi. (You too?) 

Would not recommend. 
Would not wish on anyone.

Back in Florida. Mother descending into dementia and decrepitude. 

Don’t want to do the things. I am the only person to do the things.

Almost the entirety of 2024 has been an adulting montage. Or rather, for accuracy’s sake, the first three-quarters of the year was a months-long ordeal which Joseph Campbell of The Hero’s Journey might dub the REFUSAL OF THE CALL.

I am firmly in the montage now, though, for sure. How long will it last? Who knows. Montages are interminable for the person living them. That’s why we speed them up in the movies.

So I juuuust entered the montage 2 months ago. Basically when I got out of bed. There was a lot of bed. See: Refusal of the Call.

This is sort of a MVE, a Minimum Viable Essay. I haven’t written in 10 months. A list is the first thing I’ve mustered, and I’m very glad I’ve mustered it because it means I’m back. English is so confusing, isn’t it? Mustered. Mustard. Tomato. Tomato.

Anyhoodle! Without further ado, I present you with an exhaustive yet incomplete list of Things I Learned (in 2024) that I Really Never Wanted to Learn and Didn’t Really Want to Know:

[Go to the Substack link in bio to read about the 24 things!]
Load More Follow on Instagram

Copyright © 2025 · glam theme by Restored 316

Copyright © 2025 · Glam Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

  • home
  • bio
  • press
  • writing
  • coaching
  • patreon
  • glossary
  • talk to me