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horizontal with lila

horizontal does california

in missives on 19/12/17

horizontal at Cycles & Sex L.A., an event pretty much all about pussies, not bicycles


Dear Ones,

After an afternoon of delight with an old lover in Portland (which felt sort of like closing a loop, since the last time we saw each other, I was still rather … angry), I drove south.

Portland, Oregon to Ashland, Oregon. Six hours. Quick overnight, stop in at the food co-op and a sex shop.

Ashland, OR to Weed, California. An hour and a half.

I arrived at Stewart Mineral Hot Springs around midday, and I was dismayed to learn that I was required to wear a towel or a sheet in the sauna, the common area, and the cold plunge. The only nudity-friendly zone was the phone-booth-style personal bathing room, which consisted of a tub of hot mineral water, a chair, a clock, and a few hooks on the wall.

The cold plunge was less a plunge and more, a dip in the creek out back.

Now, if you know me, you probably know that I abhor being cold. I stood on the deck overlooking the scene, the surface of the water partially covered by yellow leaves, watching braver souls splash on in and then, mostly, stand very, very still. I wavered, went back inside, and then out again, back in, decided on another dip in the bath, a sauna, a lukewarm shower, out to the deck again, and then steeled myself with the determination that I would do this thing. And I would do it — for horizontal posterity. In other words, dear reader, I cold-plunged in 53-degree water for you. In order to bring you this image. (I hope it was worth it.) I suggest you zoom in on my face.

Bahahahaha.

almost horizontal at stewart mineral springs in weed, california. (Attempt #1 of 2 – I got horizontal on the second try. Want proof? Instagram.)


Before this mineral bath experience, I don’t believe I had ever used the word “sharp” to describe water.

horizontal at Stewart Mineral Springs, Weed, California.

The bath attendant warned me not to move too quickly while in the tub. The sign in my booth clearly stated: if your skin begins to tingle or itch after too much time submerged (and too much time could be as little as two minutes), then get out immediately.

But. Well. Wellll… It looked so innocuous! It looked just like a regular bath! Perhaps a little greener. So when my lower back began to tingle, well. I didn’t get out immediately. Not exactly immediately. I stayed just a tinge longer… I thought that the water was, you know, doing its thing! Working its magic! Relaxing my 5,000 mile driving muscles.

And it burned me! Hot damn!

I had to own up to not following instructions and ask for a soothing gel at the front desk. It felt like a particularly gnarly sunburn for several days.

I felt sheepish. But now I know. Water can be sharp, kids. You heard it here. My waterburned ass got back in the car and drove.

I got to witness this before darkness:

Mount Shasta. “Did you take this while driving, Lila,” you think disapprovingly. “Why yes I did,” I reply, “but I kept my eyes on the road THE ENTIRE TIME. The fact that it came out is pretty much just magic.


Weed, California to San Francisco, California. Five hours.

As I turned onto highway 80 from I-5, I started to feel rather … nervous. The drivers (pretty much instantly) became aggressive, antsy, pushy. I turned off the audiobook and sat up straighter and paid attention. (I think I was listening to More Than Two.)

This edgy nervousness continued throughout most of the week I spent in SF, and dissolved as I drove south to Monrovia.

I stayed in the guest bedroom of a pretty remarkable intentional community for an entire week, in a city with one of the most vibrant sex-positive / kink / maker / burner / intimacy cultures in the U.S. … and I hardly took advantage of it.

This was partly because the community was housed in a legitimately dangerous neighborhood. You could say that SOMA is kind of like my own neighborhood of Bushwick, Brooklyn, but first, I don’t know it (the devil you know/devil you don’t) and second, it seemed to have an exponential increase in the amount of drug-addled street denizens. I felt uncharacteristically afraid of walking around alone. The last time I remember feeling that way, I was at my godfather’s apartment in the pit of São Paulo. I didn’t even want to take the train! I’ve definitely taken BART before, by myself, on multiple occasions throughout my 20s and early 30s, without a single qualm. Something was up. This was an extreme reaction.

Right. So. My egregious dropping of the ball was partly that. Partly.

And it was mostly because I became wildly infatuated with one of the guys living in the community and wound up hanging round the place, hoping for more time with him. He was socially awkward and gorgeous and odd and erratic and brilliant and his room was full of insects and books and felt like a set created for the Lost Boys in the movie Hook, if the Lost Boys lost their eternal youth and became thirty year-old painter/scientists.

Why was I so enamored? All I can say is that I was fascinated. Such eccentric intelligence. In the body of a boxer. Lithe. With the face of a movie star. A face that he preferred to disguise with a beard and a body that he preferred to dress in “rags,” because he doesn’t want to be appreciated for his looks.

And he smelled. So. Delicious.

The last time I was that intoxicated by a person’s scent, I was a teenager. Standing at my locker. Flush with desire because I could tell, without turning to look, that Jonathan Moore had entered the hallway. Mmm! Big inhale. Bigger sigh!

This painter/scientist, he pursued me first. (I’ll have you know!) We spent a few hours rolling around in his bed that night. He switched subjects dizzyingly, and positions just as quickly. One minute, his tongue was between my legs, the next he was lying on his back playing guitar, the next reading me an excerpt from The Little Prince in Spanish while I tried to distract him. (That was a fun game.) And then, he spoke Portuguese! Properly! Without a gringo accent! I nearly wept with joy, being able to speak to a lover in my second language.

That was the only night, though.

Ohhh, I wanted another hit. I would have spent every minute of my time in SF with him if I could have. I would have given up the episodes I recorded, the meals out with friends, the fancy sushi dinner treat, the pretty horizontal photos, the walk-and-talks, anything I had scheduled or thought about having scheduled.

horizontal with street heart in Union Square, San Francisco, CA. This happened on a walk with a friend. I would have given this up.


But we had an odd miscommunication when he invited me on a walk to do errands, pressed for time and stressed and walking ahead of me, and I became frustrated and decided to part from him and head to the grocery store solo, because his stress was becoming my stress, and that “hint of drama” as he called it later, derailed his interest in me and left me pining.

“I’m not even that sexual of a person,” he said later. “So if I get a hint of drama, I’m like, forget it.”

I was acutely aware of the ridiculousness of this thing, the outlandishly disproportionate desire I felt for this erratic, (perhaps, on the spectrum?) unsuitable-for-me human. And yet I watched myself do the things that kept me from my work, kept me from my joy. Hang around. Wait. Try to turn his attention back toward me. I watched myself do it. And I couldn’t stop myself.

The night before I left, we had a tentative plan to meet. He broke the plan in a message that said he just wanted to be alone. He was sorry. But he was really hurt.

“By me?” I asked.

“No no,” he said. “By someone I really like.”

. . . . .

Fawwwwwk. Seriously? Ouch. Seriously?

horizontal on the LOVE installation, San Francisco, CA


Due to infatuation, I dropped the ball on:

  • at least four (4!) recording sessions
  • visiting the Patreon offices (literally one single block away)
  • a kinky cocktail party, annnd…
  • the affections of a sexy, GGG, open, kinky, emotionally intelligent, intuitive, caring, present, and physically gifted person who made himself available to me from the moment we met

I did manage to get my head in the game long enough to record two episodes, with women I’d been courting for months. Brilliant women. Badass women.

Marcia, co-founder (with Reid Mihalko) of Cuddle Party, invited me to record at her home in Berkeley. Gee San Francisco’s lovely … when you see it from Berkeley.

horizontal with Marcia B. in the Room of Requirement, Berkeley, CA

I find driving in San Francisco positively terrifying.

There’s all these stop signs at the TOP of RIDICULOUSLY steep hills, and I’m white-knuckling and praying that nobody pulls up behind me but of COURSE they do, actually they pull up VERY CLOSE to my bumper because they don’t think there’s anything unusual about driving on a 45 DEGREE ANGLE and I’m stressing about getting my foot on the gas pedal in time and when it’s my turn I decide against using two feet because that didn’t work so well the last time and accidentally nearly floor it because I think “GAH I’M GOING TO ROLL BACK INTO THEM!!!” and then this trip will be OVER because I will have a totaled car and fuck fuck fuckety VROOM.

Okay. Okay. You’re fine. You’re fine. Car’s fine. You can do this. You’ve done harder things. You’ve got this.

Next block: same damn hill.

However, I made it to Marcia’s unscathed. (On the way back, however, I spent all my cash getting gas and forgot that they charge you a toll to get into San Francisco and then they gave me a toll violation and I cursed like a New Yorker and then spend the next hour in San Francisco’s infamous traffic and the next hour after that circling and circling and circling in Noe Valley, a known nice neighborhood where my friend told me to park the car if I had hopes of it not getting jacked, circling and circling because it was 6pm on HALLOWEEN and everyone was parked because they were taking their kids out for their YEARLY WALK.)

Ahem.

She gave me the best postcard I’ve ever seen. She made it.

Recording with Marcia was delightful. The room we used houses all kinds of convertible furniture and books and nooks for making things and exceedingly soft blankets and a grand assortment of pillows. She often throws Cuddle Parties in there, but it also functions as office space and movie-watching land and serves all kinds of other intents and purposes, hence its moniker: the Room of Requirement.

Marcia has a project called Asking for What You Want. I specifically wanted to talk to her about boundaries, and my near-acrobatic attempts to avoid situations in which I will be obliged to say no.

We talked about the generosity of boundaries, graceful no’s, counteracting good girl training (Good Girl Recovery), and queerness. A gem from this recording was Marcia’s proclamation: “Nobody who isn’t queer sits around wondering whether they are queer enough. If you’re queer enough to wonder, you’re queer enough to consider yourself queer!”

horizontal with sexual folklorist Dixie de la Tour in San Francisco, CA.

Right before the (aforementioned) ill-fated errand-walk with the object of my San Francisco affections, I got to record with illustrious southern firebrand Dixie de la Tour. She is the host of the longest-running sex storytelling series in America, Bawdy Storytelling!

I first admired Dixie’s skills at the RISK/Bawdy Live! storytelling show at The Bell House in Brooklyn, right before I left town for this adventure. My dear Samia insisted these folks are exactly in my wheelhouse, and I simply had to attend.

[Samia hosts the podcast Make America Relate Again, in which she has respectful political conversations with women who voted for Donald Trump. It’s astonishing. I’ve never heard anything like it. Literally. I don’t think I’d ever heard a single respectful political conversation before listening to her podcast. She’s on hiatus now, but there’s plenty to listen to.]

Dixie is one of the finest storytellers I have ever personally seen. She spins tales about her sexual awakening in the dirty movie booths, men she’s loved, men she found through Craigslist, and her wild wedding, at which her Southern family met all her freaky friends. She is captivating. I tried to shut my mouth and listen. But! I was so excited I kept interrupting! When I tried to tell her the story of a longstanding unrequited love, and fumbled all over the telling of it, she said, “You just haven’t told it enough, is all.”

* and the clouds part *

Of course! As an actress, I wouldn’t perform in a play when I’d just barely memorized my lines! Of course the most impactful, distilled, punchy, succinct personal stories are the ones we’ve told over and over. We’ve honed them. Like a stand-up act. We’ve stripped them to their essential parts. Like a statue.

If I want to tell my stories on a stage, I have to practice them. The longer they are, the less I’ve practiced! Have you ever heard the quote, I have made this letter long, for I had not the time to make it short? (Don’t say it. I know this missive is long.)

San Francisco, California to Monrovia, California. Seven and a half hours.

Driving away. Infatuation detoxing. “We don’t know each other, at all. We’re probably never going to see each other again,” he said. “I was going to invite you to New York,” I said.

“Why would I come?” he replied.

Leaving town, driving away.

Before I left Brooklyn, my sweetest, craftiest friend gave me a series of six sealed cards, to open while on the road. Each was clearly labeled. One said, “open when it’s your birthday,” another, “open when you’re wondering if anyone’s out there,” and another…

“open when he’s irresistible.” San Francisco, California.


I opened when he was irresistible. It contained six condoms and a handmade card that read:

“Traveling is like flirting with the world. It says, ‘I would stay and love you, but I have to go.'”

Truly, by the grace of my friends, go I. I still have two unopened cards, and I’ve been carrying them with me every day. They read, “open when you end up someplace magical and want to share it with someone,” and “open when you feel proud of yourself.”

JJ, Porch, Monrovia, California.

In Monrovia, I arrived in the safe space of this lovely human:

I rested there. Ate. Cooked. Talked about gender. Conducted several marathon horizontal conversations, and didn’t record any of them. Zounds!

We went to Cycles & Sex L.A., an event about menstruation and sex. I learned things.

(I had really and truly believed that it was impossible to become pregnant while menstruating. This is not so. GAH! So much to learn!)

I paparazzied Mal Harrison, sex therapist and founder of the Center for Erotic Intelligence. She is responsible for bringing research on the internal clitoris to the mainstream! She gave a presentation on the orgasm gap and what we can do about it. (One key suggestion: take the matter into our own hands.)

Picket sign photo op at Cycles & Sex L.A.


There at Cycles & Sex, in the gender neutral bathroom, I bumped into Pamela Samuelson, whom I was scheduled to get horizontal with the next day!

She was on break from her Take Back the Speculum campaign, in which she demonstrated (while menstruating!) how to look at one’s own cervix with a speculum and a hand mirror, and then guided groups of women through the process.

I wanted to. I did want to.

But. I didn’t. I didn’t do it. I didn’t look at my cervix that day.

I blame it on the overalls.

JJ, me, and overalls at Cycles & Sex L.A.

They were adorable, but. If I had been wearing a skirt, maybe … Hiking up a skirt is rather different from entirely de-pantsing.

The truth, of course, is much closer to the fact that this was at the edge of what I’m comfortable doing. “But Lila, you’ve de-pantsed and spread your legs at sex parties before!” I know. It’s true. But.

I’ve never had a positive experience with a speculum. In fact, at every gynecological exam, I cry a little, because it’s just so uncomfortable. Which is, of course, exactly the reason to learn how to use one myself, so that I can advise my health care provider on how to make it less painful for me! Speculum knowledge is speculum power!

Well. Pamela will be in New York in January. I hope to get up my gumption by then. (I’ll be sure not to wear the overalls next time.) [Update: No Pamela sighting in NY as of March 2018. I’m still waiting to take back the speculum.)

horizontal with Pamela of Embodywork L.A. in, you guessed it, Los Angeles, CA. The bowl between us contains green apples, to control “snats,” or, mouth sounds.


Pamela is a bodywork specialist— trained in sexological bodywork, holistic pelvic care, and the Arvigo techniques of Maya Abdominal Therapy. She’s a bodycare witch, a sex ed teacher, a renegade, an instigator, a libertine. In our session together, Pamela taught me more about the anatomy of my vulva and vagina, told me the tale of her polyamorous family by design, and enlightened me about radical age-appropriate sex ed curriculum for children.

***

The next day, coming out of the parking garage next to a Yoga Works, post-class, I knocked my side view mirror clear off the car. There was a BRIGHT YELLOW POLE next to the toll booth and I just didn’t see it.

My friend’s handyfriend wound up affixing it back onto the car with silver duct tape. And there it stayed, all across the South and back up the East Coast. Duct tape is miraculous.

It cost $250 to repair. Could’ve been worse.

***

The night before I left L.A., I stayed at the apartment of the the sex therapist Dr. Cat.

A visitor project at the museum. I didn’t add one. I don’t know why.


They abbreviate it to “Broken Ships L.A.” Thinking of relationships as actual ships makes so much visceral sense to me.

On the way, I stopped at the Museum of Broken Relationships and endeavored to read every single story about every object in the place. I closed out the joint, but still didn’t manage to read every story. I tried. The melancholy felt faintly satisfying.

Cat took me to a potluck with her tribe of folks. (More on that / the reason I went to Utah, in the next missive.)

I crashed hard on her couch.

We managed to sneak in a quickie recording on her furry living room rug in the morning, just before she embarked on a full day of client sessions and I left the state lines.

horizontal with Dr. Cat Meyer in Venice, California.state lines.

We talked about threesomes, about learning to express our discomfort in the actual moment that it’s happening, boundaries, and a few of our more challenging lovers.

May the snats spare you,
Big Love,
Lila

P.S. In the next missive, Las Vegas and Utah!

 

 


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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!]
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