The rain’s turned into snow…

Four years ago, Mia Wallace and I joined Sarah the L, Smoochie Poo, Peace Corp Girl, and Head in Hinesburg to mourn the end of yet another year while simultaneously celebrating the beginning of the next one. After Mia Wallace shared with me her belief that how you celebrate New Year’s Eve impacts how you spend the rest of the year, I made sure to do my part in helping to plan a great evening. I even went so far as to create the first of what has now been five straight Mr. Benchly’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve Super Mixes. I made a copy for each partygoer. And though I did my best to make the CD a soundtrack for the evening, what I was actually doing was attempting to create a soundtrack for my life.

I know I’m not alone when I say that I’m intrigued at the thought of having a movie soundtrack play in the background of my everyday life. Whether it’s an inspirational Explosions in the Sky song for the walk to the Election Day voting booths; or a heartbreaking Bright Eyes song playing on the drive home from a break-up; or the upbeat Belle & Sebastian song that makes the stroll down Church Street that much more entertaining; or the hopeful Beatles song seemingly inspired by that first kiss; I’ve often dreamed of my life being set to music. As Caden Cotard said, every person in the world is a lead in his or her story. If that’s true, don’t we all deserve a musical accompaniment?

One song that has never made its way onto one of my Super Mixes despite its rightful claim to be there is the late great Dan Fogelberg’s “Same Auld Lang Syne.” The song tells the tale of two old lovers running into each other in their hometown and then spending the snowy evening drinking and reminiscing of days gone by. They toast their past and their present, and they attempt a conversation riddled with “emptiness.” In one of my favorite lines, Fogelberg says that the two were “living in our eloquence.”

I can’t think of a better way to describe a conversation between two old flames than how Fogelberg paints the picture in his song. Anyone who has ever experienced such an encounter firsthand knows that interacting with an ex is a complicated dance: there’s the obvious connection that drew you to each other in the first place, but it’s been marred by whatever drama that inspired your break-up; depending on how much time has passed, feelings are either confused or gone altogether and with them has gone the love-is-blindness that helped you overlook your ex’s flaws. What remains and the only thing capable of sustaining the conversation is the eloquence of your words. But your relationship has already ended for good reason and it’s inevitable that you’ll “run out of things to say.” Such is your fate as exes.

Despite “Same Auld Lang Syne”’s especially relevant subject matter this past holiday season (considering my break-up with Ms. Darling in the rainy autumn), it failed once more to make the final cut for my most recent Super Mix. Instead, I tried yet again to create a soundtrack for my life and, as embarrassing as this is to admit, like a documentarian trying to rewrite history, my song choices reflected my hope at reconciliation with Ms. Darling. A few of you received copies of the Super Mix before, predictably, I realized how unhealthy such a compilation was; I suppose that these copies will now be considered collector’s items. The lesson learned here is that though we each are leads in our own stories, we can’t act out our lives; we can only live them. Since that day, I’ve done my best to live my life to the fullest.

What’s so sad about Fogelberg’s song is that it’s autobiographical; it’s a genuine soundtrack to his life because these are words he actually lived. And it’s a song that will never be mistaken for a hopeful one. At the end of the night, the old flames kiss and go their separate ways back to their separate lives. Fogelberg sings, “Just for a moment, I was back at school and felt that old familiar pain. As I turned to make my way back home, the snow turned into rain.” Ms. Parker and I have debated the meaning of these lines and I’m not sure that we ever settled on an ultimate interpretation, but I don’t think that it’s much of a stretch to say that Fogelberg was going for symbolism with his words. My belief is that the snow represented joy or hope, and the rain, sadness or realism.

This song and my interpretation of its symbolic lyrics were on my mind late last year on an unseasonably warm and rainy December day when, on my walk to work, I heard a woman say to her friend, “well, at least it’s better than snow.” As timing would have it (and you know how this blog and its author love timing), this depressing, global-warming-loving comment happened two days after I met Cherry on Top, and inspired me to write her an email to tell her about it. I told her that though I may not ski, and though I’ll most likely feel differently in April, even I will admit that in the winter, I prefer snow to rain. And later that day, as I typed another email to her, adding yet another page to this new chapter in my life, the rain outside turned into snow.

"Life is what happens to you…"

On the drive to the climbing gym the other night, while Mr. Extracurricular and I caught each other up on the happenings of our respective lives, I silently planned the climbs I was going to attempt that evening. Considering that each new trip to the gym carried with it an improvement from last time, I planned to conquer a personal-best 8 routes this time. And after a quick start up the white route and an equally quick (and efficient) trip up the red one, I tried my hands (and feet) at the black one in the corner, which was set one level higher than the beginner level. And that’s when I fell off. Disappointed but not discouraged, I next attempted an easier green route that had always seemed made for me. And then I fell off that one, too. Then the light blue one and the green one proved too challenging and I had to cheat a number of times on an easy blue one. I ended up leaving the gym with a bruised ego, a battered body, and the need to run home as quickly as possible to wash away the night with a hot shower. My plans did not come to fruition. (On a related note, Mr. Extracurricular’s plans also fell through when he realized the orange route he had not yet completed and which was proving to be his nemesis, had been replaced by another route.)

In the beginning of, at the end of, and even during my past relationships, among the number of things I’ve been called (including sensitive, over-sensitive, a leader, a follower, anxious to the point of creating an imbalance, etc.), the one that stands out the most (read: for the purpose of this blog entry) is “a planner.” And depending on the context and my mood, I’ve been known to take this as both a compliment and an insult. What I won’t question is whether or not it’s true; it is. Whether it’s the directions to Sister #2’s house for Thanksgiving, or a detailed itinerary of the hotels I’ll be staying at in England, or the iPod playlist started early in the year that’s called simply Possible Super Mix Songs, or the fact that I carry a first-aid kit on even the smallest hikes, or the fact that I’ll rent two or three different movies because I’m unsure of which one my movie date will want to watch, or when I run around town looking for the right flowers and dog bone, hardly a day passes for which I haven’t been preparing some sort of plan. Some exes found this annoying. Others thought it was cute and complementary. One even thought it was cute, annoying, and complementary.

I’m sure the Trash Heap would have a junior-high-school field day with this, but off the top of my head, I have no idea why I want my life to be so structured. It’s not like I was born on my due date or anything; I was early, with so much energy the doctor said my parents should just put shoes on me and let me walk home. And it’s not like my childhood had any major traumas that might force someone to desire stability in his/her life; it was your basic son-of-a-preacher-man life that was equal parts consistent and unpredictable. And it’s not like I spent my adolescence swimming in an abnormally large pool of plans; like everyone else, sometimes I had plans and sometimes I didn’t. So then what? We’re all reflections of our parents, right? Well, a thorough investigation of the Benchly house reveals the same varied qualities as the rest of my life: a checklist for every grocery item imaginable, printed out and used each and every trip to the grocery store, sitting beside a messy stack of random papers that may or may not have been placed there during the Clinton administration. Whatever the reason, I am who I am, I’m not going to change, and you can love me for it or not. Your choice.

The reason I bring this up is because lately I’ve been spending an inordinate amount of time (even by my standards) thinking about plans, both made and broken. In the past month, I’ve made plans to spend time with pretty much every friend and/or loved one within driving distance (read: 3 hours or less). I’ve even made a handful of new friends (which is a big deal for me) and am beginning to include them in my plans. You see, I got pretty lazy about making plans with friends after Labor Day and have been trying for the past month or so to make up for it. As I’m sure you know, spending time with friends and loved ones is great therapy for the soul. And sometimes it’s comforting to sit back and think of all the people in this world who think of you every now and then. Doing so reminds me of a belief I heard once that a person’s spirit lives on so long as someone is alive to tell his/her story.

Also, in the past month, I’ve been doing my best to learn how to accept when plans change. To paraphrase one of my all-time favorite Douglas Coupland quotes, “sometimes I scare myself with how many of my thoughts revolve around making me feel better about not having plans.” It’s incredible to think that this latest obsession with plans is the direct result of one plan that didn’t come to fruition: I had a cozy picture of a Thursday night in winter, waiting all day to finally be able to lay down on the couch to watch the newest episode of LOST, speculate about what’s going to happen the next week, and then fall happily to sleep. I’ll still be able to do this; just not the way I originally planned. And I’m planning to one day be OK with that.

We’ll tak’ a cup o’ kindness yet for auld lang syne

A few days before the holiday season swept us all off our feet, Sarah the L officially invited me and Mia Wallace to a small party at her home. Other attendees were: Mr. Mikes (who was recently renamed Smoochie Poo), Smoochie Poo’s best friend Peace Corp Girl, Sarah’s sister Head, and Head’s dog Darby. Mia and I were placed in charge of snacks and some refreshments and did a marvelous job if I do say so myself. Thanks to us, the party was chock full of wine (in both bottle and jug form), top-notch champagne, cheese, bread, crackers, olives, and one extra-delicious beef stick.

To top things off, I started what I hope to be an annual tradition by giving each party guest a burned CD of my top 15 favorite songs I listened to in 2004 (called Mr. Benchly’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve 2005 Super Mix):

1. Hem – Lord, Blow the Moon Out Please
2. Hem – When I Was Drinking
3. Ray Charles – It Makes No Difference Now
4. Rachael Yamagata – Worn Me Down
5. Donavon Frankenreiter – It Don’t Matter
6. Sufjan Stevens – Flint (For the Unemployed and Underpaid)
7. Rufus Wainwright – Oh What a World
8. Over the Rhine – Mary’s Waltz
9. The Beta Band – Dry the Rain
10. Ben Harper – Steal My Kisses
11. The Postal Service – The District Sleeps Alone Tonight
12. Jolie Holland – Sascha
13. Iron & Wine – Bird Stealing Bread
14. Van Morrison – Astral Weeks
15. The Innocence Mission – What a Wonderful World

Thanks to great food and great company, and in spite of starting off the evening by blindly directing Mia and our vehicle through various dark Vermont roads that led us to nowhere near Sarah the L’s apartment, the night was a thrilling success with one minor exception: those damn 90 minutes I spent passed out on the bathroom mat after having thrown up the beef stick and everything else that temporarily called my stomach “home.”

Sarah the L woke me up at around 2 a.m. (the details here are slightly fuzzy) and tucked me into bed where I promptly fell wide awake and where Mia and I stayed awake until 6 a.m. talking and laughing about anything and everything and absolutely nothing I can remember at this moment. One thing I do remember is that our laughter was both interrupted by and inspired by a late-night visit from what sounded like a mouse in the wall. Before long, Mia drifted off to sleep and I drifted off to snoring and we awoke to enjoy brunch with the rest of the group.

After viewing probably one-and-a-half-too-many episodes of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, we bid farewell to Peace Corp Girl and then ventured into B’town for Indian food and a movie. I ordered a “medium spicy” dish and after finishing half of my meal and enduring the subsequent overwhelming perspiration, our waitress smiled at me and said, “next time, mild.” Next, we watched Finding Neverland while seated in the Roxy Theatre’s second row. The movie was a tearjerker for Sarah the L and 2 hours of a sore neck for me. At this point, Mia and I said goodnight to the others, took off our shoes, and sat down on pillows in what is now one of my favorite B’town establishments: Dobra Tea. We closed down the place and headed to my apartment where Mia decided she’d rather drive home in the morning. Despite lacking the comedic inspiration of Sarah the L’s mouse, we were still able to devour the late-night hours with conversation and laughter.

Although the January 2 morning brought with it Mia’s departure from Vermont, she returned a day later and a little over a day before her impending flight home to the city so nice, they named it twice. Our plan: continue to get to know each other better than we ever could have in a high school study hall. And given our time constraints, I think we did OK. Highlights of our time together include the always reliable Henry’s Diner food, another trip to Dobra Tea (though, this time with louder and more obnoxious patrons next to us), a quick glimpse of The Triplets of Belleville, and a small but good-intentioned attempt at creating a makeshift tsunami memorial on Church Street.

For those of you who have never met Mia, know that you should be jealous of my time spent with her. She’s continually inspiring and surprising and has an uncanny knack to always clearly present that different point of view you never thought to think. She confronts her fears and is never content to settle for less than her infinite potential. And her attitude is contagious, infecting every life whose path she crosses with an unending drive to live. And so, on our deja-vu 5 a.m. trip to the airport this morning, I found myself both thankful to know her and sad that I don’t know her better than I do.

It’s now January 5, 2005 and as the new year slowly takes shape, my New Year’s celebration has finally come to an end. For the stories I’ve just shared and for the ones I’ve chosen to keep to myself, this New Year’s will be one I’ll never forget and I hope that all involved know how thankful I am for the part they played. A wise woman once told me that how you celebrate New Year’s will impact how you spend the rest of the year. If this is the case, in 2005, I’ll be surrounded by loved ones, inspired by amazing people, and motivated to do the unexpected. My hope for you is the same.