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horizontal with lila

brave on the rocks, or, choosing to open when you want to shut but you know it would really be better if you opened

in missives on 31/07/18

horizontal in Baltimore, Maryland on the sidewalk outside The Charmery in Hampden. Soulful October 2017.


When I was a teenager, and nearly the only place for me to hang out in suburban Florida was my local Barnes & Noble, I found a book called spilling open.

Sabrina Ward Harrison, at the age of 21, published excerpts from her sketchbook, a compressed collage full of self-portraits and color and painted photographs and tender wonderings and frank doubts.

I have carried this book with me through (I counted them on my fingers not so long ago) eleven moves. From high school to dorm room to share to first apartment, across the country to house to apartment to house, back across the country to storage in Dad’s garage to apartment to apartment to community. It still occupies a place of honor in my postage stamp of a room. It’s been four years and counting that I’ve lived at Hacienda Villa. I was sixteen when I found spilling open.

It wasn’t until my 30s that I picked up her second book.

I’m 35 now.

It’s called brave on the rocks.

The narrative begins after the success of her first book, which surprises and overwhelms, more than delights her. The unexpected attention fills her with increasing self-doubt and the pressure to live up to her own image … to the point that she gets an ulcer.

At the top of the book she reprinted a letter from her father. He reminisces about their barefoot walks together along secret trails when Sabrina was a six year-old child.

“The thing about bare feet,” he writes, “is that they move easily and quickly over mud and dirt and sand and grass but tend to hesitate before a barrier of pointy, sharp-edged gravel.”

That summer, her grandfather re-paved his driveway. The first time they approached the edge of it, barefoot, Sabrina held her arms up for a “special carry.”

“But in this situation something told me not to pick you up.” […] “In my mind’s eye I see myself hunker down in front of you and explain the rules of barefoot travel. I told you paths are not always smooth and familiar like the Indian Trail or the good ones out on Pine Ridge. Sometimes there are rocks on the trail and the only way to cross them is to be brave. As I sit here so many years later, I smile when I remember how proudly you walked over the gravel that summer. Whenever we came back to the cottage by way of the Frog Bridge, you would get breathless and boldly announce how you were going to be ‘brave on the rocks.’ Love, Dad.”

I have had many opportunities over the past couple of years to open when I wanted to shut.

***

I don’t use the word “friend” lightly. Friends are people you show up at the hospital for, and who show up for you. Ones you can call in the middle of the night with a crisis of the heart. Ones who bring you rhinestones, ice cream, and pictures of cats when you are in need. And sometimes — much less often — ones for whom I open when I really want to shut. Those are my friends.

I imagine most of us could count these folks on two hands.

The ones you’re willing to have the difficult conversations with. Genuinely hard talks. Where the words don’t come easy. Where you risk the truthfullest truth. The ones where you say, “I don’t think this is the man that you should marry,” or, “I think you need professional help,” or, “Your behavior towards your lovers looks like emotional abuse,” or “I know you’re angry with them, but you didn’t actually make a clear request.”

My friend Julene calls these talks “come to Jesus meetings.” They are one of my primary friendship barometers.

We’re not trained for uncomfortable conversations anymore. Maybe we never were. But I think it’s worse now. It’s got to be. Most of us barely make eye contact these days. We’re out of practice in both social niceties and face-to-face honesty, so every sticky conversation carries the gravitas of an intervention.

I have to really, really care to stage an intervention.

In college, I was kind in love with a guy who was sort of my boss. He was a couple of years ahead of me in school. I did my work study gig at the organization he founded. I remember him telling me once, that someone he admired told him once, that success in life is directly related to one’s ability to have uncomfortable conversations.

I believed it.

I still believe it.

I think about it all the time.

Three years back, I knew I needed to have a “come to Jesus meeting” with my friend.  In person. In Portland. I was visiting. I wanted to see her as soon as I arrived, but she delayed. Then postponed. Then delayed again. Our relationship had been shaky at best and distant at most for a couple of months, and I felt in my digestives a rumble of worry and an undercurrent of anxiety over it all.

She was two hours late to meet me.

At first she said she’d be a little late, because her morning hike took longer than expected. Then she pushed it back an hour. Then she said a lot of resistance was coming up in regards to our meeting, and that made her unable to show up on time.

I asked if that was her way of cancelling.

She said “No, no,  I’m coming.” Then it took another hour for her to arrive.

During that second hour, I had a come-to-Jesus meeting with myself.

Phrases swirled in my brain like, “devaluing our friendship” and “flaky.” Angry fantasies like, I’m going to send her a text that says simply, “I’m done.” I’ll erase her number. When she gets here, I won’t tell her my exact location so she gets a taste of her own medicine. I’ll remove her from my Facebook. Our friends will still be my friends. And then this winner: No one person’s absence from my life will ruin it.

The angry fantasies were all about how I would shut down. How I could make her feel what I was feeling, so she would share in my hurt.

The thing was, she was hurting too, of course.

Underneath my shouting thoughts, there was a quieter, calmer strand of contemplation, as well. And it said, How about that time she took care of you when you were at your most depleted? You cannot forget that. This is her flakiness. It’s one of the aspects of her personality that you dislike. But you knew that already. Are you going to abandon her now that the flaky has gone direct on you? Also, you chose a motto for this year. You said you would North Star by it. Stay, right? Stay, Lila. Show up. Keep paying attention.

And underneath that there was something else — underneath the shouting thoughts and the quieter contemplation both, the whole maelstrom of my system in tumult, was a steady undercarriage of my spirit that could feel the first touch of sun on my bare spring arms. It breathed the air of so many trees, and did not take for granted their sweetness. This part — for it was this part — counseled love, and the choices made from love. It stood calm in the face of my jittery chest, my tensed solar plexus. This part of me knew things were ultimately ok. I have been excavating this part of me for years, while my emotions hijack my system again and again.

And so I stayed.

***

I have never naturally gravitated towards meditation. When I was 15 years old, I began taking yoga classes. I thought my mom was the one who brought me to yoga, but she tells me that I asked her to take me. The instructor was the only one around for a 30-minute radius, so we drove to Clearwater, Florida, to take classes with him. He would give a dharma talk for the first 10-15 minutes of class, and I would get So. Bored. (He did have a particularly soporific voice.) When will he stop talking so that we can do yoga? I don’t want to sit still with my eyes closed. I want to do stuff with my body!

I carried this disinclination to meditate throughout my yoga teacher training and my first 9ish years of teaching.

And then I took meditation class with a punk. Well, a Buddhist (former Buddhist?) former punk named Ralph de la Rosa. He pulls techniques from all these different traditions and then encourages us, AA-style, to take what works for us and leave the rest. I think the anarchist and the purist are constantly at a game of table tennis inside him, and we get the benefit. (Ralph’s evolving relationship to his sexuality — including his first sex talk, first time, and the celibacy practices of the Hare Krishna — is the subject of this quickie episode of horizontal, 6. divine pleasure: quickie with a meditation teacher.)

I actually took this image on our first and only date. He thought it was awkward that I wanted to take a photo. But he understood, afterwards. I mean, look at this.


In his class, Ralph reframed my relationship to meditation. One of the methods he taught us laid the foundation for the almost daily — yet brief and un-timed (shocking! lawless!) meditation practice I have now.

Instead of shrinking our awareness down to a laser pointer and focusing the dot on only our breathing, Ralph invited us to expand our awareness … wide, wider, widest, to notice anything that there was to notice. The physical sensations (tension in the legs, warmth in the belly), the sounds in the room (the heater, the cars passing, a few errant birds), concrete things like that, and also the more esoteric things, like our hamster wheel thoughts, our energy level and the timbre of it, our emotional landscape, how connected we feel to other humans. And our breath, yes, that too.

We could also calibrate the volume of our awareness of some of those things by pointing a mental arrow towards them.

Your mind is a circus, he said, I paraphrase. Trained monkeys over there, some bedazzled elephants over here, the trapeze up overhead, a clown up in the stands, somebody always selling peanuts, a big crowd, the lights going, singers singing, and all manner of things to look at. And if your mind is a circus, then there, at center stage, in the very center ring with a spotlight on it, is your breath. You’re not always looking directly at the center ring, necessarily, but you’re always aware that it’s there.

What I got from this was the sense that I didn’t need to discard anything in order to meditate.

[Also, I LOVE THE CIRCUS.]

My awareness was wide enough, I saw. It could blanket everything and anything that entered, without trying to turn things aside.

Whenever I practiced more austere modes of meditation, I felt like a curmudgeonly card player, continually discarding. Like my thoughts were bum cards, hindering my hand. And I had to put them down, over and over again, nearly every second. I had to label them “thinking,” and put them in the discard pile. I was failing at the task every moment. I did not cultivate the gentleness to temper the precision, as Pema Chodron advised. It felt like a punishing practice that turned my mind into a disciplinarian, taking my mind to task. I found it unreasonably exhausting. Perhaps it is simply too rigorous for the way I wish to live my life. I am also willing to entertain the idea that I am a bit lazy. You could say that I wanted the benefits without the discipline. You would mostly be right.

But also, I don’t think there is One Size Fits All for pretty much anything on the planet, so why would it work for meditation?

The center stage analogy really did something for me. I started to characterize my mind as a full-on circus, not just some hyperactive monkey. My mind is an incredible menagerie. I’m proud of all the sights to be seen on the inside of my brain. I don’t want to tame them away. I cherish them. It seems to me that the menagerie is the primary source of my inspiration.

Meditation people are always talking about the “monkey mind.” These schools of thought characterize our minds as children with hyperactive disorders.

I prefer the circus. I like this more benevolent way of regarding my mind: as a beautifully-choreographed mess with its own inherent logic. Dangerous and smelly things are happening, yes. Also, incredible feats of graceful prowess, catchers making connection with their flyer’s arms at seemingly the last moment. And yet, in the very center ring … with a spotlight on it … in the middle of my beautiful circus … is my breath. This doesn’t mean I can’t see the elephants. It means that the arrow points to the center ring, and I am big enough to encompass all of it.

Breath in the center ring.

***

In the middle of downtown Portland, I checked in with myself.

I felt anxiety. I inquired deeper. What’s the anxiety made of? If I didn’t have a story attached to the feeling, would it still be unpleasant?

It wouldn’t be unpleasant, it would feel almost like … excitement.

I identified my anxiety as acidic excitement.

I curled up on a ledge in the park. I waited. And I began to meditate. And write. Meditate and write. Breath in the center ring. I would close my eyes and feel the sweetness of my breath and before too long, a sentence I could not deny would well up inside me and demand expression on paper and I would give it form and then close my eyes again. I felt like Dumbledore removing silvery strands of memory and placing them in the Pensieve so that Harry could see them. I wrote:

Decide that she’s worth it. That friendship is worth it. That turning towards love is worth the effort. It’s the only true nobility in the world, turning towards love. Livid and bruised and in pain. It’s so easy to say “fuck you.” It’s so much harder and more beautiful to say, “I see that you’re in pain. I am too.”

She arrived. I felt my reptile brain coil, prepare to strike. To demand an apology! To say that I’d been there for a whole hour waiting! I knew though. I knew that this would not be conducive. I knew that this would not give me what I really wanted.

My smile didn’t come right away, so, I did not smile. But we embraced. And then we began to walk. There’s a way that a walk-and-talk is like a road trip. It carves a path for the difficult conversations. Mostly we look straight ahead. Occasionally we glance over, but not too long, so we don’t crash into anything. And we’re moving. With a sense of getting somewhere, we talk. I think this is why I like writing on trains and buses so much.

We found a place to sit. I gave her a gift. She gave me an apology, which was also a gift. We spent the following day together, nourishing our friendship by/and telling the truth.

This is what it looked like after we spoke.


***

Later in the trip, alone in an airbnb booked for two, teeth-chatteringly angry and nauseatingly sad, I resisted a come-to-Jesus meeting for another relationship. With my lover. Her…suitor?

My relationship with him made both of the meetings necessary.

Before the meetings.

On the day she and I spent together, nourishing our friendship and/by telling the truth, she showed me a message from him. Something like I got so turned on when I saw you today. When Lila and I wrap up our relationship and she goes back to New York, I’d really like to explore us.

I took the rental car and went to the coast by myself.

I was supposed to pick him up. We were planning to have a romantic weekend at the beach. I didn’t pick up him. I didn’t even tell him I was going. Or not going. He can find his own way back, I fumed. I cannot recall another time when I have been this livid. Were I a cartoon character, there would have been steam coming out of every orifice.

I met his text messages with aggressive silence. I could barely eat. My fine organic groceries went untouched in the fridge. When my stomach got ferocious, I ate a handful of berries. I walked on the beach. I meditated on the rocks. I watched a movie on the VCR. It had a VCR. I ate a handful of berries.

Pacing at 11pm on the second floor of the house, a-writhe with rage, I called my friend Matthew Stillman. I called Matt because I was sure that he would counsel me to open instead of to close. I stood in the only crevice of that house where I could get cell phone service — pressed up against the floor-to-ceiling window, and the phone rang long. He answered it in the voice of the half-asleep and I realized all at once that it was 2am in New York and I cried with anger and cried with the pain of not being chosen and cried to have woken my friend in the middle of the night. He shook himself awake in seconds when he heard my voice crack.

“I’m here,” he said. “I’m here.”

“I’m so sorry I woke you up,” I said.

“It’s okay,” he said. “I’m here.”

About to sit with my anger on the rocks. Literally.


I took this bathroom portrait in that airbnb. I’ve never shown it to anyone before.

I vomited up the story, still pressed against the glass, relentless snot and tears mixing and dripping down my hand.

He heard it all.

Then he said, “You have to give him the gift of your anger.”

“It’s so hard to see it as a gift,” I said.

“I know. But it is. It is sacred rage. Your deep feeling, your sensitivity, is your gift.”

“What’s sacred about it?”

“It’s pure. Like a 12 year-old in their room, raging at God and screaming ‘It’s not fair!’”

I didn’t really understand it then.

I barely understand it now.

But I heard it. I felt it. And after a sleep, I answered one of the messages.

The next day I drove the rental back to Portland and raged sacred at him in the passenger seat of his parked car.

If I hadn’t, we would have no connection now.

***

About an hour after that, all three of us had a come to Jesus meeting.

My friend suggested that we do an exercise called “Beginning anew.” She learned it from the followers of Thich Nhat Hanh. It is a series of four deceptively simple, ingeniously curated prompts:

  1. What I appreciate about you…
  2. Where I fell short…
  3. When I felt hurt…
  4. How you can help…

We sat at Harlow, my favorite Portland restaurant, and actively opened when we wanted to close but really knew it would be better if we opened.

It’s not that it wasn’t painful.

It’s that it was worth it.

Our relationships have never been the same, but relationships we have.

I stopped on the road on the way back, before I spoke to him, and took this self-portrait.


***

Sometimes, when I tune in, I notice that a pop song has been playing in my head. On repeat.

That day it was “Do It Again,” by Nada Surf.

These lines, mainly:

maybe this weight was a gift / like I had to see what I could lift

They don’t get enough credit, I thought. Well done Nada Surf.

***

Being brave on the rocks means choosing to engage with the pointy and feels its pressure, rather than desensitize ourselves.

As I like to tell my yoga students: “You can pretend that it’s not happening, but it won’t help. You might as well show up inside it, pay attention, and breathe as deeply as you can. This pose is not a life skill. Breathing deeply in difficult situations, is. Now that’s useful.”

The sensation will probably be intense. The rocks may very well be sharp. We’ll have to pay a lot of attention. Even so, with all our attentiveness, we might get cut. Or bruised. Choosing to open does not bypass the hurt. It gives us the opportunity to digest it. Because the alternative — to disengage, by means of alcohol, junk food sex, sugar, television, or any of the myriad drugs we use to numb it out — when we hold our arms up for that “special carry,” we relinquish growth.

***

I saw an image of myself: as both flower and farmer.

It was dusk, impending night, and my petals wanted to close. That’s what petals do, by instinct.

The human me placed my own fingers on the inside of the petals, and, with insistent gentleness, did not allow them to shut.

May we choose to be brave.

 

 

On the rocks.

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

Lila
I take a portrait every time I go to the chiroprac I take a portrait every time I go to the chiropractor. 

(You mean to say you, yourself, do not go to the chiropractor like this?)

1. This past week: exhausted, in between grief attacks

2. When they kicked mom out of her assisted living

3. While Mom was in Hospice care (those are my pajamas)

4. After Dad’s funeral, wearing my mourning armband

5. No makeup — couldn’t be arsed

6. The day after Dad died

7. Valentine’s Day, before everything — before @synchlayer died, before Dad dropped dead, before Mom died, before @ralphdelarosa died

Y’all.
I am so. Tired.
Dear Ones, I had no choice in what happened with Dear Ones,

I had no choice in what happened with my father after he died. 
I wasn’t consulted about anything except my schedule. 

Even though I am next of kin. Even though I am his only daughter. Even though I am his only child.

With my mother, I had all the choices. 

Years ago, she told me she wished to be cremated. She was not willing to discuss anything else, not about illness, infirmity, or death, though I tried, many, many times over the years to broach these end-of-life conversations. But my mother was a stubborn ol’ gal and when she planted her feet there was no moving her.

Which leads me to Saturday. The celebration of her life, the ceremony, was for me, in her honor. In her honor, but for me. Given all the choices, I chose color, flower patterns, gifts, community, a ritual with roses, art-making, rainbow snacks, and joy. 

Joy with a side of grief. Joy in-the-face-of. Joy.

I’ll probably share more photos from the celebration (as well as the Brazilian song I sang, accompanied by my old friend Nate Najar, one of the great young jazz guitarists) in another missive, but I wanted to give you my eulogy — 

✨ in case you wished to be there but couldn’t 

✨ in case you knew my mother and care to learn things about her you never knew

✨ in case you need to give one

✨ in case you want to witness it done differently

✨ in case your heart aches for me

I told the truth to the best of my ability. Whenever I write, whenever I do any kind of public speaking, I always ask myself: 
Is this true? Could it be more true?

This was the truest true I could get to. 

I hope it means something to you, and if it means something to you, I hope you’ll let me know — in some way.

Big Love,
Lila

P.S. Click the #substacknewsletter link in my bio to read / listen to / watch my eulogy. Thank you. ❤️‍🩹
Singing in her first language, Portuguese, at my m Singing in her first language, Portuguese, at my mother’s funeral, on May 17th, 2025. The song is “Carinhoso,” which means affectionate… if ‘affectionate’ were an altogether lovelier word.

Perhaps carinhoso is more akin to the word ‘tender.’ So, I sang tender, at my mother’s celebration of life.

I was accompanied by one of the great young jazz guitarists, Mr. @natenajar … who happens to be my friend from high-school-time, and who also reminded me that, back in the day, he received a few Portuguese lessons from my mother. 

I had forgotten that. A gift, all around.

I gave the eulogy beforehand. You can watch, listen to, or read it on my Substack through the link in my bio. Titled “eulogy for a mother, mine.” 

Thank you for witnessing. 

#mourning #celebrationoflife #nomothersday #funeral
My mother’s celebration of life was held on Satu My mother’s celebration of life was held on Saturday, May 17th, 2025. No one was to wear black. Everyone was to wear florals, and I, wore too much blush, in her honor.

The invitation read:

FROM LILA:

My mom, Sula Donnolo, died peacefully on Friday afternoon, May 9th, 2025. Her favorite place was the Unitarian Universalist Church of St. Petersburg.

We will gather at her favorite place at 1 pm for a brief service (1 hour long) & a reception with snacks afterwards.

Mom abhorred the color black and adored bright colors - please wear floral patterns (or tropical patterns) & bright colors in her honor.

LILA REQUESTS...

IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO CONTRIBUTE FLOWERS:

Lila asks that, in lieu of flowers, you send any monetary love offerings you’d like to give, to her fund for a Community Happiness Project on their property in Gulfport.

PayPal or cash (or you can find another way). PayPal link: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/horizontalwithlila

IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO OFFER CONDOLENCES:

Lila is feeling deeply exhausted, after the death of her friend in March, her father in April, and her mother in May. 

Please SIGN THE GUEST BOOK provided at the reception, or write her an email with your condolences at suladonnoloflorida@gmail.com 

Please do not approach her to say you are sorry for her loss. 

She invites you to approach her with silent hugs.

***

So much gratitude for so many:

Mel for keeping me alive last week.

Deniz for keeping me alive this week. And the logistics.

Zachary for the beautiful photos.

Nate Najar for playing “Carinhoso” so I could sing it.

Rev Ben for hosting the service.

Rev Dee & Ruth & Jeanay for speaking.

Kristi Ann for the signs.

William for finding us everything we needed.

Meghan & Joseph & Hospice Nurses Vi & Susan for the grief books.

Everyone who made a bit of art for my guest book.

All who contributed to the fund for a Community Happiness Project on our property.

This is community.
Thank you thank you thank you.
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!
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