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horizontal with lila

113. other people’s love: horizontal with a global matchmaker (2 of 4)

in episodes on 11/09/20

Oh, Hallo there Lemarc, renowned matchmaker & relationship expert…


113. other people’s love: horizontal with a global matchmaker (2 of 4)

Hello my horizontal lover. horizontal is the podcast about sex, love, and relationships of all kinds, recorded while lying down. This is Season 4, my Season of Experiments. I’ll be playing with form in all sorts of ways: with coaching sessions and mash-ups and crossovers, happenings and themes and advice sessions, horizontality in unexpected places, and other intimate surprises.

Lemarc:  I think that a conscious relationship would be one where you are not… reacting in your current relationship based on your past experiences, or past pain, in particular. That you are more mindful and that you are choosing actions that are helpful for your love. That you’re — it’s not all about this feeling of love. You know, the psychologist Barbara Fredrickson talks about the feeling of love being this fleeting feeling that is in your body for a moment and then just flitters away when you’re thinking about something else. You know, we can achieve these moments of what she calls “positivity resonance,” experience that with a stranger, or of course we can experience that in a relationship and with increased intensity because we have worked on it. But I think a lot of people make the mistake of thinking that this feeling is love.

*

Lemarc:  I think for the first five years of my career, I was predominantly finding people the matches they were looking for — you know, so it was like, Give me a brief and I will find that person. And I felt that, after a while it’s like, I can give you exactly what you’re looking for in a match… but then you have to make it work. Like that’s easy, to find these people that you’re looking for — even when you give me the most impossible task, like okay this is a 0.02 percent of the population — but, you know, sure, I’ll find that. And then, I’m introducing these people and then you can see that actually, now the person that you were dreaming of is in front of you, and what are you doing, you’re fucking it up.

Lila:  You watched your clients do that.

Lemarc:  Yeah, absolutely. And then they blamed me for it of course, because it was my fault that (laughs) that the date didn’t go well! And so when I started my new agency in Sweden, I thought, I am not just going to find people the matches that they’re looking for, I’m going to teach them how to love. I’m gonna teach them the skills that we should have learned in school, and then, when they meet someone, they will be able to build the relationship and it’ll be a connection that has the potential to go deeper and deeper and deeper and deeper, and, whether that is over time, or in a week, that they have the capacity and skills to do that.



Hello my horizontal lover. horizontal is the podcast about sex, love, and relationships of all kinds, recorded while lying down.

This is Lila. Image by Kai Mata. September 2020

This is Season 4, my Season of Experiments. I’ll be playing with form in all sorts of ways: with coaching sessions and mash-ups and crossovers, happenings and themes and advice sessions, horizontality in unexpected places, and other intimate surprises.

In the first four episodes of this season, I (virtually) lie down with Lemarc Thomas, global matchmaker, relationship expert, sweetheart, psychology-versed purveyor of kindness, native St. Helenian, marriage equality advocate, husband to Michael, and, as he has been dubbed by The Telegraph, “the gentle but determined Cupid.”

Our first two episodes are available in all the podcast places for all my horizontalists. Parts three and four will be available exclusively to patrons of the horizontal arts.

Become a patron for access to The Full Horizontal!

Become a Patron!

In our first part, episode 112. broken a few hearts, Lemarc interviewed me as if I were his newest matchmaking client. It’s a particularly revealing and tender episode for me, as I disclose my visions for a romantic relationship, struggles with belief & sexual attraction, past experiences with some of the men I’ve hurt, and some who’ve hurt me, my pattern of choosing unavailable men to love, fear of feeling suffocated, whether I’ve experienced emotional and sexual attraction at the same time, what I love about being me, and what I imagine my future partner will love about being with me.

You could use episode 112 to Think Like Your Own Matchmaker (I made a video about it for you) and get closer to envisioning the core of your heart’s desire. Ponder the series of questions Lemarc asked me, and perhaps try journaling on them, or getting together with a beloved friend to ask them of each other. If you do so with a friend, I suggest you record it, so you can listen back and see: am I exploring love in accordance with my values?

I mean, don’t you wish he were your Matchmaker?

This is the second episode of my four-part arc with Lemarc. Our experiment is my very first themed episode. I interview Lemarc all about matchmaking. We discuss:

*  the differences between traditional matchmaking and Lemarc’s modern take on the industry

*  his 4-step process

*  love coaching vs. therapy

*  being our full rainbow & sharing our crazy

*  how to not to date like a teenager

*  non-negotiables & deal-breakers

*  cultivating communities that will hold the love that we meet

*  The Matchmaking Experiment

*  becoming a matchmaker

*  how Lemarc keeps his vast network in mind, &

*  his signature love advice.

 

If you’d like one-on-one guidance from me on your intimate struggles, I now offer Personal Intimacy Roadmap Sessions. They are 60-minute sessions of sex-positive, judgement-free, kink-aware, LGBTQ+ celebratory, gender-affirming support for what ails you in the realm of sex, love, & relationships of any kind. A session includes exercises, techniques, recommendations, homework, & a tailored roadmap of resources to use as you navigate the terrain of your intimacy challenge. One happy client said, “I’ve had a lot of therapy. But you give advice a therapist cannot give!”

To schedule, email lila@horizontalwithlila.com, and I’ll send you my welcome form, so I can best prepare for you.

If you desire ongoing support of your intimate growth, become a patron of the horizontal arts at the $100/month level and receive a 30-minute coaching session every month! To peruse all the patron tiers and sign up, take a gander at the horizontal Patreon, and thank you! For being part of making the world a more intimate place.

In next week’s patrons-only episode with Lemarc, we explore his childhood as an effeminate boy growing up on one of the most remote inhabited islands in the world, belonging and outsiderness, chameleon-like behavior, and codependency.

Come lie down with us in Uluwatu, Bali, Indonesia & Stockholm, Sweden.


Links to Useful Things:

Lemarc Thomas – The Matchmaking Agency’s website

The Lemarc Thomas Matchmaking Instagram

Love 2.0 by Barbara Fredrickson, which frames love as micro-moments of positivity resonance

Lemarc’s 4-steps to Love

Ken Page’s work on Deeper Dating, which distinguishes attractions vs. attractiveness

Linnea Molander, Swedish Dating Coach (Lemarc’s colleague) and the origin of a favorite Lemarc quote, “be your full rainbow”

Alain de Botton on the “The True Hard Work of Love and Relationships” episode of the On Being podcast (Lemarc quoted his suggestion that on an early day, you say, “I’m crazy like this. How are you crazy?”

The Dark Side of the Light Chasers book (every gift has a shadow; every shadow has a gift)

Logan Ury, who coined the term “relationshopping”

The Matchmaking Institute in New York, where you can train to be a matchmaker!

The Invisibilia episode “The Personality Myth”

Lemarc invites any horizontal lovers who wish to apply for his network / open membership to: Get in touch and say you are horizontal!


Show Notes:

(if you quote from this resource, link to the post or the horizontal Patreon!)

[4:26]  Modern matchmaking

Lemarc:  Now there is a whole industry of modern matchmakers, like myself, perhaps not so focused on marriage or religion, but more focused on finding the right match, finding compatible matches and […] helping people to love consciously.

[7:47]  Other people’s love

Lemarc:  I think everyone has strong opinions when it comes to other people’s love.

Lila:  Of course. We’re all armchair relationshipping.

[9:53]  The difference between traditional matchmaking & Lemarc’s work

Lila:  So after I focused on Indian Matchmaking, I thought, Okay, is anybody doing this for non-Indian, non-Orthodox Jewish people? Who’s doing it in a way that crosses ethnicity, that crosses religion, or that doesn’t require religion to be a part of it? Who’s doing it in a way that is international? Who’s doing this is a way that is adapted for the modern world? And that is when Linnea brought me to you! And so I’m curious about the differences between these traditional matchmaking processes — what can you tell us about traditional matchmaking, and then what you’ve developed in this modern climate?

Lemarc:  I think the biggest difference is — traditional matchmaking is focused on marriage, often, whereas, modern matchmaking — or for me at least. I think I’m on the extreme other end where I’m focused on conscious love. I would not say that it matters if they get married, or if they stay in a relationship, and this may be a bit provocative but — because a lot of people ask me, “Oh, how many marriages do you have?” And, I don’t see that as a goal, because I would prefer for someone to be in a relationship for 5 years and then end it because it was not the right relationship than to have marriage as the goal, like, “Yes! I’m there. That’s the win!”

Lila:  There are so many terrible marriages, so why that should be considered The Win is beyond me. 

Lemarc:  Absolutely. And of course, like half of marriages end in divorce. So I think we have to be a bit more conscious about love, and choose the right partners, but also choose when it’s not the right relationship for us.

[12:06]  Lemarc on conscious love / conscious relationships

Lemarc:  I think that a conscious relationship would be one where you are not… reacting in your current relationship based on your past experiences, or past pain, in particular. That you are more mindful and that you are choosing actions that are helpful for your love. That you’re — it’s not all about this feeling of love. You know, the psychologist Barbara Fredrickson talks about the feeling of love being this fleeting feeling that is in your body for a moment and then just flitters away when you’re thinking about something else. You know, we can achieve these moments of what she calls “positivity resonance,” experience that with a stranger, or of course we can experience that in a relationship and with increased intensity because we have worked on it. But I think a lot of people make the mistake of thinking that this feeling is love.

[14:35]  Unconscious love

Lemarc:  I think that most of us are unconsciously falling in love, and then expecting it to be magical.

[16:30]  How Lemarc’s matchmaking work has evolved

Lemarc:  I think for the first five years of my career, I was predominantly finding people the matches they were looking for — you know, so it was like, Give me a brief and I will find that person. And I felt that, after a while it’s like, I can give you exactly what you’re looking for in a match… but then you have to make it work. Like that’s easy, to find these people that you’re looking for — even when you give me the most impossible task, like okay this is a 0.02 percent of the population — but, you know, sure, I’ll find that. And then, I’m introducing these people and then you can see that actually, now the person that you were dreaming of is in front of you, and what are you doing, you’re fucking it up.

Lila:  You watched your clients do that.

Lemarc:  Yeah, absolutely. And then they blamed me for it of course, because it was my fault that (laughs) that the date didn’t go well! And so when I started my new agency in Sweden, I thought, I am not just going to find people the matches that they’re looking for, I’m going to teach them how to love. I’m gonna teach them the skills that we should have learned in school, and then, when they meet someone, they will be able to build the relationship and it’ll be a connection that has the potential to go deeper and deeper and deeper and deeper, and, whether that is over time, or in a week, that they have the capacity and skills to do that.

[18:48]  Step 1 of Lemarc’s 4-steps to Love [Be mindfully aware of what you have learned about love.]

[24:06]  Love Coaching & Matchmaking as opposed to therapy

Lemarc:  My background is in trauma, so I have to try very hard to not do therapy. (both giggle)

Lila:  Why?

Lemarc:  This is not a therapeutic process, and I think that I need to have quite clear boundaries. If I notice that it would be helpful for someone to do therapy and something, then I recommend for them to go to a therapist, but for me, I— it is a different relationship, the coaching relationship, or the matchmaking relationship and the therapeutic relationship, and I think that, like fundamentally, it is about responsibility. When I’m coaching and matchmaking, the client is totally responsible for their situation and I’m just a mirror. I’m just facilitating. Whereas, in a therapeutic situation I am taking more responsibility for this client. The boundaries of the relationship is different.

Lila:  I’m wondering what it is to have more responsibility, because the way you described the matchmaker/client or the coach/client relationship is what I understand intellectually about therapy. Is that they don’t take any responsibility for you, or for your actions in the world, they just provide a mirror, and maybe, at some point, an interpretation.

Lemarc:  It’s an ethical responsibility, an ethical obligation. And also just in terms of licensing and things like that as well, but, when you’re going into a therapeutic process with a client, they are much more vulnerable than going into a coaching relationship, and the starting point of someone going into coaching or matchmaking is saying that they are well, they are self-sufficient, you know, they can take care of themselves, whereas going into the therapeutic relationship, the client is in a much more vulnerable place, so therefore you have a duty of care for them.

[26:27]  Step 2 of Lemarc’s 4 Steps to Love [Be more you. Live according to your values.]

[29:17]  Lemarc on investing time in relationship skills

Lemarc:  The amount of time we invest in learning the skills we need for, or developing the skills we need for our occupational lives — imagine if we spent some time developing the skills we need for our relationship lives.

[29:57]  Lemarc on Ken Page’s work on Deeper Dating — attractions vs. attractiveness, and hiding parts of ourselves

[31:10]  Lemarc references Linnea (his Swedish Dating Coach colleague, and Lila’s friend) and her work around being your full rainbow

Lemarc:  Our mutual friend Linnea, I stole something from her. She talks about being your full rainbow. If we can allow — rather than adapting to, say, Okay you really like this emotional part of me, so I’m gonna give you that, or, You will probably like my intelligence, so I’m gonna give you that. You’re gonna like my dirty humor, so I’m gonna give you that. What if we could line up all of the parts of our rainbow, and allow all of them to kind of just shine in harmony with each other.

Lila:  The thing that comes up for me is: Do you really want to lead with Everything? (Lila laughs, Lemarc chuckles) I mean! You know what I? You know, first date, do we really wanna lay it all out? I was in this discussion group, […] Touchy Topics, and in this discussion group, one of the women shared that she didn’t wanna do that. She didn’t want to compartmentalize, or show up with, what my college friend Helena and I used to call, your Representative. Not just show up with your Representative, that you sent to the date (giggles) to gladhand for you, but she would do the absolute opposite. That she would, she would sit down at the date and be like, “Let’s tell each other all of the unlovable things about ourselves!”

Lemarc:  Yeah, I love that!

Lila:  (laughing) Date one though, Lemarc? Date one?

Lemarc:  Love it.

Lila:  Really?

Lemarc:  I don’t think that you have to.

Lila:  Not— date seven? (Lemarc and Lila laugh lightly)

Lemarc:  I don’t think that you have to lead with everything. I think that, all your parts could be in harmony with each other. So, what I imagine is that, on one hand, we are like adapting so much to try and work out what this other person might want, and giving them that part, and squashing some other parts. And then on the other hand I imagine that we are just at ease, at peace within ourselves, and we’re like, in our zen space, where we can just, you know, we can just meet that person, where we are. And you don’t have to tell them anything! You could just sit down in front of them in silence and look in their eyes.

Lila:  Mmhm, mmhm. I’m just imagining myself showing up to date one, and saying, “Hey, I’m Lila: I have depressive episodes and wildly fluctuating self-esteem!” (laughs)

Lemarc:  Do you know Alain de Botton from The School of Life? […] He says, what people should do on a date is say, “I’m crazy like this. How are you crazy?” So that you see whether your crazies can work together!

[36:16]  The Intimacy Warrior path of daring to be more us

Lemarc:  I think that if we dare to be more us, rather than to try and work out what other people want us to be, then we might be surprised how… people may actually like it!

Lila:  Yeah, I mean it, it really can be a great feat though, right, because a lot of those parts that we may try to hide are the pieces that we loathe ourselves. In ourselves. And so, daring to allow that to be seen, to allow people to love us in it or reject us in it, yes, that’s an Intimacy Warrior thing. That’s really like a Love Warrior path.

A Love Warrior in contemplation.


[38:18]  Lila on flaws and lovability

Lila:  When I zoom out a little, and I think about my friends. We are all deeply flawed people, right. I can see my friend’s flaws. Very clearly. And I don’t… I don’t remove my love from them because I notice their— these things about them that they consider flaws, because of course, you know, the concept that I got from The Dark Side of the Light Chasers is that, you know, every gift has a shadow and every shadow has a gift. Right, so I see the gifts in their shadows. And also I just, I just love them! And so, you know, if it’s that they’re not loving themselves; if it’s that they’re a workaholic, if it’s that they choose people who are broken, because they so want to fix and they keep choosing these people who, who just zap them, I… I see, and, love them. (laughs lightly) I don’t think that they are un-lovable, because they are these ways. 

Lemarc:  Yeah, definitely. And, that reminds me of when we were talking about attachment and secure people, and why would a secure person someone who’s either anxious-ambivalent or anxious-avoidant. When we take this one dimension of who a person is, then of course it can be like, yeah, why would they just it— but there’s so many parts of, of who we are as human beings! We’re so complex!

Lila:  Right!

Lemarc:  That we have so many gifts, and so many flaws and, we can’t really just narrow it down to these, these few things.

Lila:  Including seemingly opposite things that we carry, and embody at the same time! 

Lemarc:  Yeah, absolutely.

Lila:  And our personality is malleable! There was a beautiful Invisibilia episode about how much personality was influenced by the sameness, or the same-enough-ness of our environment. And how, once placed in a violently different environment, we would present a personality that was so different. Because we contain multitudes!

Lemarc:  I also get, when some people are telling me about what they want in a partner — that they want someone whose been through shit. I’m not saying that everybody wants this, but it comes up sometimes that, we’re not looking for perfect lives.

Lila:  Unblemished.

Lemarc:  Yeah. For some of my clients, I can see that, if I tell them about someone who has not experienced any darkness, they’re like, “Sooo, what has this person got,” like, “What have they learned? What depth do they have?” If everything’s rosy then, how are they going to like, connect as a deep level? There is really a gift in the toughest things that we go through, as you mentioned.

Lila:  The resilience is so beautiful, right.

[41:45]  Lila on finding out that a crush of hers had very little empathy

[43:22]  Step 3 of Lemarc’s 4 Steps to Love [Working out what true compatibility is for you.]

Lemarc:  A lot of us are dating like teenagers. We’re falling for someone through chemistry and attraction, rather than understanding what our underlying emotional needs are, what is, our fundamental requirements in a relationship, and leading with these things first. So what I’m doing in this step is turning the dating process upside down.

[45:10]  Lemarc on non-negotiables & dealbreakers, as well as one of his personal non-negotiables

[48:11]  On the matter of children

Lemarc:  What can often happen is you meet someone where you have the connection and you have the chemistry and you date them for a long time, and initially they’re like, “Yeah, well, for you, I can live without having children,” and then, later on, they’re like, “Actually I really want them.” And maybe you can work that out, you know, there’s also that part of me that feels like everything is negotiable, (giggling) you can work out anything. […] And that’s why it’s also, you know, quite difficult to find out what you’re gonna put in this non-negotiable bit, because for someone like me, I feel like I can negotiate on pretty much anything!

[49:24]  The adoption question that made Lemarc reflect on what he really wants, independent of Michael

[50:37]  Step 4 of Lemarc’s 4 Steps to Love [Take deliberate action towards love.]

[51:21]  Lemarc on whether Tinder counts as Step 4, and Lila on Tinder & the Paradox of choice

[55:42]  How Lemarc is a part of his client’s community in Step 4

[56:39]  What can Step 4 look like for those who are not able to be Lemarc’s clients?

[59:17]  The Matchmaking Experiments (Lemarc’s singles events)

[1:01:29]  How Lemarc became a matchmaker

[1:10:26]  Lemarc mentions a matchmaking school — The Matchmaking Institute in New York

[1:11:20]  How does Lemarc keep his vast network in mind?

[1:13:50]  Lemarc invites any of you horizontal lovers who wish to apply for his network / open membership to: Get in touch and say you are horizontal!

[1:14:23]  Lemarc’s signature love advice

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« 112. broken a few hearts: horizontal with a global matchmaker (1 of 4)
114. can I sit with you: horizontal with a global matchmaker (3 of 4) »

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Lila
“You make a selfie look like a Titian,” said a “You make a selfie look like a Titian,” said a playwright I admire, after a staged reading I performed in. 

(Thanks Richard Alfredo!)

I’m not the blushing kind, but, I think I blushed?

Before I started this series, way back in the glory days of 2013 (it was the innocent of times, I tell you), I was, well, kind of maybe sort of possibly a tid bit embarrassed by how many self-portraits I took? Nevermind the fact that artists have been their own medium since time immemorial. It’s different when you’re using a cell phone. Right? 

{WHO SAYS.}

I think of the great quote (had to look it up — it’s Chase Jarvis): 

“The best camera is the one you have with you.” 

I’ve never been a Hasselblad-chaser or anything. But I figured I should at least be using my mom’s old Minolta. For street cred. It’s from the 70s! It had an embroidered strap! The lens cap didn’t fit because the metal around the lens was dented! It still is! I still have it! It’s a bonafide film camera. You can feel that. Thing’s chonky. Vintage. Which means. That shit is heavy. I don’t want to carry it in my purse. It won’t even fit in half my purses! So. The best camera I had was my cell phone. It was always with me. 

(And when @thetravelingcreative Fiona taught me to wipe off the “grease filter” each time, it got even better. Fiona has taught me so many things, organizational wizardress that she is. Thanks Fiona!)

Read the rest of the essay (& see those bathroom portraits from 2016) on Substack! The link is in my bio, friend.
Summer & bae 1. Passport Photo Time! 2. She’s Summer & bae

1. Passport Photo Time!

2. She’s an interior decorator now, y’all! (Also, bae’s paintings are world-class! You could buy one!)

3. You can watch the sunset from this deck when you rent my apartment!

4. Last Day of Grief counseling at Suncoast Hospice, or as @mummybites called it, “graduation.”

5. Toastmasters supporting Toastmasters at @schoolcreativityinnovation ‘s immersive piece “Funeral for Someone You Didn’t Know”

6. Loralei Goes To The Beach!

7. A coupla lemons in downtown Safety Harbor

8. Whenever I see pictorial veggies I think of Tanja

9. Can you stand how gorgeous this retro candy apple fridge is?!!

10. This is Myrna.

11. Zach’s paintings in the kitchen!

12. WEIRD AL 

13. I repeat: WEIRD ALLLL!!!!!
The upper limits problem is a concept I learned fr The upper limits problem is a concept I learned from the book Conscious Loving. I tell people about this book. I recommend it to everyone. I buy it for friends. And of the entire book, the parts I continue to re-read are the passages about the upper limits.

The premise of the upper limits problem is this: at some point during our childhood, usually without realizing it, we made a decision about how good we are allowed to feel. We associated feeling good with, pretty much immediately, feeling bad. We were jumping for joy and babbling exuberantly and got told to keep it down; we brought home good grades and were told not to brag, etc. So at this point, most of us (not all of us, but honestly, probably the vast majority of us) created our own personal glass ceiling.

In the book, Kathlyn and Gay Hendricks put it this way: “Starting in childhood, most of us seem to put a lid on our positive energy in order to stay at the humdrum level of existence necessary to function in the workaday world.”

My upper limit is much lower than I’d like it to be. (Still!)

{Cont’d.}

Read the rest of the essay on Substack (link in my bio)!

@officialgayhendricks
Love Letter to Sarasota 1. Feets at the Ringing H Love Letter to Sarasota

1. Feets at the Ringing House mosaic

2. Band photo (band coming soon!)

3. Bathroom Portrait at the Ringling Museum of Art

4. Happy Hour with bae

5. Selfie with the most astonishing circus mural I’ve ever seen

6. Coffee shops are best offices — working on my Substack tiny wins essay @projectcoffee 

7. Always a kiss on the cheek when we selfie

8. Circus Museum!!

9. Backrooms, a movie without a why

10. Closer feets
When I was a kid, I used to win things all the tim When I was a kid, I used to win things all the time. Writing contests, penmanship awards, badges of excellence. (Games of skill, you’ll note, not games of chance.) 

I have no idea if I was able to celebrate any of these wins, because, as you may already know, I have hardly any memories before the age of 12.

I do know that after high school I stopped winning things. Maybe I won a single thing in college (an achievement scholarship for my final year). I went to NYU in New York City, my friend. The place where it happens. Small fishy in biggest pond. And I don’t know if this came into being when I stopped winning stuff, but about 10 years ago I realized that I genuinely did not know how to celebrate. I did not possess the skill of celebration. Or to be precise, I couldn’t feel celebration. In my body. Or anywhere else, really. Not on the inside. Not on the outside. And certainly not in a way that made my cells dance.

[You can read the whole essay — about how I learned to feel joy again — on the horizontal with lila Substack. Link in my bio!]
And even more Chiro office portraits: 1. About to And even more Chiro office portraits:

1. About to visit @jamesmuseum in my @tecovas & my @gigipip 

2. Happy that I finally found the perfect outfit (pants @farmrio collaboration with Adidas) to wear the forest green bomber that @czechmex gave me at my clothing swap years ago! These @l.o.m_design earrings are among my top 5 hero pieces!

3. Feelin’ like a fiesta— skirt is @farmrio / shoes are @unitednude / hairbow & necklace come from happy place treasure trove @riskgalleryboutique in Bushwick, Brooklyn!

4. And she thought she wasn’t a baseball cap person!

5. THIS SCARF from @pookieandsebastian — all I need now is a 1960s stewardess uniform and a Pan-Am bag, baybyyy!

6. Grumpy in sweatsuit #1

7. Grumpy in sweatsuit #2

8. Currently obsessed with majolica & majolica-adjacent designs. Don’t even know how to pronounce it!
Did you ever make a list of the experiences in you Did you ever make a list of the experiences in your life that could (even subliminally) be affecting your behavior to this very day? We did. I found it incredibly powerful.

You can read mine: I called it “trauma with that lowercase t.” 

(The link to my horizontal with lila Substack, where I keep my writing, amongst other bits of expression, is in my bio.)

And if you would like to be witnessed in this, I’d love to read yours too. Send it my way.
Love Letter to Palm Springs Featuring: Enormous Love Letter to Palm Springs

Featuring:

Enormous hat (from Marianne’s of Palm Springs)
The Love of My Life
A Selkie Dress
Street Art
&
A moste excellent scarf (gifted by said love of life)
There is a cure for this crisis of loneliness, and There is a cure for this crisis of loneliness, and it is intimacy, but *only if* we can expand our definition of what intimacy is and can be. […..]

{I’ll show you how to do this! I gave this keynote speech at my dear friend Adam @mindmaprenovations event, Lifelong Learners. You can read the whole transcript and/or watch the full speech on my Substack!}
See that resting frown face on my mom as she slept See that resting frown face on my mom as she slept?

I’ve started to make that same face. I wake from a dream or a doze to find that I’m frowning. I touch my lips to make it stop. After a few moments, I discover that they are making the frown shape again. I can’t make it stop because I’m sleeping when I do it. I’ve started doing it when I’m not sleeping too. When I’m awake, I think it’s a cross between a grimace and a frown. A frimace? (I mean, it can’t be a grown. Or can it?)

I don’t really have that much to frown about anymore, except, I suppose, for the onslaught of fresh horrors perpetrated by the country I live in on the daily, the greed of the few and desperation of the many, the natural disasters that are frequenter and hotter and wetter and gnarlier as the earth continues its job of beginning to shake us off its back… yeah I guess there’s not much to frown about, really. 

I took Mom to FloridaRAMA because she had been complaining for months that she didn’t do anything anymore. She mentioned concerts, plays, ballets. But by the time the sun went down, she would be sundowning and wouldn’t want to go anywhere anyway. So that afternoon I decided to pick her up and take her on an outing — which was always a pain in the ass, and especially a pain in the ass to do solo. It involved going to her room and making sure she was dressed, convincing her to get dressed if she wasn’t, which was a laborious process, insisting that we needed to take the wheelchair which of course we did because she was falling all the time and brachiating (holding onto walls and less sturdy things like chairs, tables — at least, some nurse told me that this is what it’s called but the internet seems to only relate it to apes swinging from their arms to get from place to place) […]

Continued on horizontalwithlila dot substack dot com (the link is in my bio)
In the bathroom of the Italian restaurant after Da In the bathroom of the Italian restaurant after Dad’s cold rainy rural upstate funeral looking like a sad British clown / Nowhere, NY / April 12th, 2025

Right after my father died, there were Anthonys and Tonys everywhere. 

Suddenly everyone was called Tony and everybody else was talking about their Dad or playing songs about death. 

* Passing a girl on the street talking to her friend, and the only words you catch are “My dad had…” 
* Walking into your favorite gluten-free café, and they’re playing the Flaming Lips song “Do You Realize?”

Do you realize / that everyone you know / someday / will die?

* Realizing that the second title for Billy Joel’s song “Movin’ Out” is “Anthony’s Song.” I never truly registered this until I was trying to write one morning in a blessed cacao shop (yes, for real) and I paused to listen to the opener:

Anthony works in the grocery store
Savin’ his pennies for someday

* Ordering fries from the surfer guy at the beach shack on my pilgrimage to the ocean, when his co-worker shouts, “Hey Anthony!”

If you put this stuff in your feature film script, your screenwriting teacher would tell you it’s too pat, too predictable, “don’t put a hat on a hat.” (The Writer!)

It’s like that old quarters experiment on attention… you start looking for quarters on the ground, and suddenly, you see them everywhere.

The drugstores full of Father’s Day crap. Marketing emails about “Dads and grads.” Only one company sent an email that said, Hey, we know that Father’s Day time is tough for some people, so click this to opt out of all Father’s Day related emails.

Click. CLICK!

I wish I could click that link for the universe. No father stuff, please. No Dad shit. But there were quarters everywhere, of course, because the back of my mind was attuned to all things Dad.

{You can read the rest of the essay on Substack. Link in my bio, bb.}
Love Letter to New York, whom I miss so much 1. S Love Letter to New York, whom I miss so much

1. Straight out of a fitting for “The Deuce”?

2. Free Friday at @whitneymuseum 

3. Basquiat makes me feel like home

4. Madison Square Park photo op (irresistible)

5. Candid

6. Got to see the lovely @josescaro & @benbecherny ply their craft at @bricktheater 

7. Charming marquee!

8. Closing night vibes (not pictured: the succulent plant I brought in lieu of flowersof)

9. Chuck Close in the subway!

10. More subway Chuck Close!

11. Man Ray retrospective at the Met

12. Love a good silhouette

13. A rare VERTICAL bathroom portrait in one of the finest bathrooms of them all, at the lovely New Mexican food joint with the rainbow cookies Of My Dreams, @ursula_brooklyn 

14. My man is a photographer too. 🤩

15. Cannot. Resist. Photo Booth.
I wrote a list in 2020 titled “How to love me wh I wrote a list in 2020 titled “How to love me when I’m ... depressed”... and in this essay, I encourage you to write your own version (How to love me when I’m... anxious, How to love me when I’m... burned out, How to love me when I’m... in despair)...

And if you write one, how I would love to read it. (Or even learn about one of the items on your list, here in the comments).

Here’s an excerpt:

 “One of the characteristics of my depression (and most of my other tizzies, such as but not limited to anxiety, severe procrastination, adulting paralysis, etc.) is that while I’m in it I have no idea what — if anything — will help me get out of it.

It’s more like I DON’T WANT TO BE HERE BUT I DON’T KNOW HOW TO GET OUT SO I’LL JUST HIDE UNDER THE COVERS UNTIL I WANT TO DO SOMETHING AGAIN CALL ME IN 6 MONTHS.

Ergo, therefore, if I’m in a state, and you ask me what I need, or what you can do, I may or may not have the wherewithal to tell you. Emphasis on the not. I may not even have the wherewithal to know.

And if I don’t know, how can I tell you?

I can’tdon’t, then.

If I’m not in a state I probably have plenty of things I could say but that’s when I don’t need the help so badly. (A lá it’s not the worst while you can still say the worst.)

As I mentioned in the subtitle: You don’t come with an operator’s manual. Your model came out of the fleshbox with zero instructions. And since no one possesses your operator’s manual, no matter how much they love you, you are going to be the supreme author, the expert on you, since you’ve been studying you your whole life. Please for the love of Pete & Ashleigh, do your people the great good turn of writing them some instructions. Triage options, if you will. Trust me when I say that they (nearly all of them) need it.

If you write it for them, they will have it when you need it.

This little list could, quite without exaggeration, save your life.”

The link to the whole essay is in my bio. (Join me on Substack darling!)

#substack #substackwriter #depressionandanxiety #communityiseverything
Love Letter to St. Pete @stpetefl Where we met, Love Letter to St. Pete @stpetefl 

Where we met, where we re-met ❤️‍🔥

1. An afternoon at @grandcentralbrewhouse with my handsome gentleman in @warbyparker 

2. Bb’s first @nineinchnails concert (okay, technically in Tampa) in @selkie & @viveylife . It was stellar. Trent sounds just like he used to and the projections were gorgeous!

3. Matching denim jumpsuits ( but his is a @onepiece )

4. The finest pizza in all the land (even with my dietary restrictions!) from @noblecrust (OMNOMNOMNOM)

5. He even makes doctor’s appointments fun.

6. I love matching him sooooo muchmuch. 

7. Just us and a zebra, nbd.

8. Theme Park joy

9. At the art show @wadastpete that my gentleman curated for his students. 🪐☄️🛸👽🚀✨
When I was a kid, I used to read myself to sleep. When I was a kid, I used to read myself to sleep. 

Actually, I don’t know when I stopped.

I read myself to sleep in my childhood bedroom, with a flashlight under the covers of a trundle bed (drawers filled to the brim with dress-up clothes) when my mom said it was too late to be awake. I checked out 25 books from the Freeport library at a time, filling the trunk of my parent’s car, and devoured them in weeks, partly from my perch in the flowering dogwood tree in our backyard (were the blooms ivory? or cherry blossom pink?), partly while curled up on an orange-and-yellow-ticked seat cushion I dragged down to the crawlspace in the basement — my “secret hiding spot,” which was neither secret nor hidden and so can only be termed a spot, armed with Oreos and flashlight, and the remainder under the covers before bed.

I suspect I knew more words then than I know now. There are still words like “vehement” that I’m only about 70% sure I know how to pronounce. I learned them in context. I can spell them. I can use them in a sentence! But am I saying them correctly? 

Unsure.

I read myself to sleep in high school, even though I had to get up unconscionably early to get bussed in to my magnet program — Pinellas County Center for the Arts — 35 minutes away from our sad little apartment. Like a magnet, @pcca_gibbs PCCA grabbed young artists from the whole county.

I had a major in high school, which is more usual now, from what I hear, but wasn’t so usual then, and what I majored in was called Performance Theatre (as opposed to Musical Theatre, the love of my life I never thought I was good enough for). 

I really wanted to go to the Fame school in New York — LaGuardia — but when I was 12 my Mom divorced my Dad and forced me to move to Flah-rida. So I went to PCCA instead. (To be honest, she probably wouldn’t have let me commute into the city to go to Fame even if we had stayed on Long Island.) 

Read the whole essay (link to Substack in my bio)!

#booknerdlife #readingforpleasure #readingrainbow
My man and I got our nerd on at @nerdnitestpete ! My man and I got our nerd on at @nerdnitestpete ! 

We had the opportunity to support my lovely, engaging, and compassionate Happiness Ambassador friend Adam Peters aka @mindmaprenovations as he changed some lives by teaching us how to begin developing a preference for positivity. I’ve seen him give this presentation a few times before, and this was the best one yet — and to the biggest crowd, over 300 human nerds!

I love us.

I consider it my sacred duty to paparazzi my friends when they do marvelous things, as I hope to have done unto me!

P.S. Applied to give a Nerd Nite presentation myself … fingers crossed bb’s! 

1. My gentleman is so handsome. (Also, I got this stellar skirt in excellent condition from my favorite thrift store with a cause @casapinellas !)

2. Toasties supporting Toasties! @dtsptoastmasters members: me, Steve Diasio, Dawn Cecil (two-time Nerd Nite Speaker alumni!), & Rick! (Not pictured here — but later in the carousel) Christian Carrasco.

3. Fit check baybeeee.

4. Caryn, Nerd Nite boss extraordinaire, introducing the evening.

5. Caryn introducing my friend Adam (did I yell “THAT’S MY FRIEND!” at the end? WHY YES I DID.)

6-10. Adam rocking the casbah.

11. Fellow Toastmaster Christian.

12. I love mein mann!

#nerdnite #nerdnitestpete
A woman approached me. We collaborated once, a yea A woman approached me. We collaborated once, a year prior, I think. Time is weird. She reached out both her hands.

“What a beautiful mourner you are,” she said.

I took her hands.

I think I said thank you.

She was referring, I suppose, to the gloves, the dress, the shoes, the lipstick, the earrings. 

But what does it mean, to be a beautiful mourner? 
What does it mean to mourn beautifully? 
To have good grief?

“My dad dropped dead,” I said, to get myself used to the shock of it. 

“My mother is dying,” I said, to reconcile myself to the fact of it. 

I don’t wear mascara anymore, because I cry every day.

People hugged me in airports, at rental car counters, in line for a sandwich. They hugged me in the TSA line. At the chiropractor. The grocery store. My father dropped dead, I told them. My mother is dying. I told them and they hugged me. I was glad I did. I was glad they did.

Sometimes, when people were truly asking, if I had the time, and I had the spoons, I repeated my litany of 2025. So they’d understand: it has been this kind of year. It seems that everyone has this kind of year at some point, or, devastatingly, at several points in a life — a maelstrom, a dervish, a crucible, a nexus, a whammy, a time — an Alexander’s-no-good-very-bad-terrible kind of year. 

There were so many months in February. So many years in April. So many decades in the first half of 2025. I didn’t want to become an adult, but 2024 made me, and 2025 sealed the deal. 

It’s amazing I managed to get this far without growing up.

READ the whole essay on Substack
SUBSCRIBE through the link in my bio and make my day, darling 

💋 

#substackwriters #goodgrief
Love in La La Land 1. “So this is where they ke Love in La La Land

1. “So this is where they keep the LIGHT!” -SATC … At our first @lacma member preview, enjoying the majestically empty Geffen galleries before the permanent collections moves in.

2. Urban Light, and me (installation by Chris Burden)

3. A historic view at LACMA, never again to be seen!

4 - 13. Art, mostly part of the Digital Witness exhibit

14. Love at the @gettymuseum 

15. Queer exhibits! 

16. Sunset at the Getty with my love

#museumnerd #lacma #lacmamember #digitalwellness #thegetty #loveinlalaland
For you, when you need it, and for the people in y For you, when you need it, and for the people in your life, when they need it.

Here’s an excerpt from the essay:

[To read the whole thing, follow the link in my bio to my Substack (and subscribe there, darling)!]

My chiropractor called me out a few weeks back. 
He said, with his characteristic smile (he has nice little teeth), “I read your essay.”

“You did? Thank you for reading,” I began, genuinely surprised and moved.

“But I still don’t know what to say!” he admonished. “You only told us what not to say!” 

Then he gave me an enormous cashmere-scented candle in a plastic bag. 

This was not apropos of nothing. I mentioned that scent in the essay. 

That giant cashmere candle, so big it has not one but FOUR wicks, means something. And then he had to go and ruin it. (jk, jk, Dr. Brian!)

“Hang in there,” he said, at the end of our session.

I cringed a liddle. (That’s not a little, not a lot, it’s right in the middle, a liddle.)

But you see, he was completely right! I told him I’d give him a list! I hadn’t given him a list! So I began compiling. Every time someone said a thing that made me wince, it went on the list, which lead to Part 1: What NOT to say when someone dies.

Each time someone said a thing that felt like love, made me farklempt, I took a screenshot, and it went on the list. 

This is the farklempt list.

As I wrote in “what NOT to say,” the useful things people say are fairly varied (and tailored to the griever), while the un-useful things tend to be generic variations on a tired theme.
“what TO say” will be a living document, updated whenever I have something useful, or supremely un-useful, to add. Here we go.
Love in Louisville. 1. Photo credit to my love, Love in Louisville.

1.  Photo credit to my love, Zachary

2.  Selfie with Street Art by the windy, windy river

3.  Horsies! Street Art! (Do you know how much I love murals?!)

4.  Looking like an award-winning art teacher at the art teacher conference (ahem, he is the award-winning art teacher!), wearing a @riskgalleryboutique necklace & big fcking bow!)

5.  A Wizard interlude! What a delight to witness my friend @personisawake absolutely Rock @cm_louisville & inspire a roomful of humans

6.  When your love matches the art. 🖼️ *chef’s kiss*

7 & 8. Major interior design maxi inspo for my ADU reno from @21clouisville by @fallen_fruit 🌺🌷🌸🌻🌼💐🪷

9.  The crayon shirt, bow, and soft rainbow chiclet necklace style brought to you by my inner 6-year old!

#ilovelouisville #wizardry #creativemornings #21clouisville #21c
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