Thursday, December 9, 2010

The Dating Cycle

So I have noticed a strange phenomenon amongst  the single people in my town.  I call it the "Dating Cycle."

Basically it goes something like this:

The Relationship Phase:


Following a particularly sexually charged Halloween weekend, sexy cat


sits her on and off, sometimes serious, significant other down and has "the talk."

Over the next few months, the air temperature drops, turkey is consumed, and gifts are exchanged. A relationship has formed. Boyfriend and girlfriend are happy to have a warm body to snuggle with, a steady piece of ass to rub on (even when the waistline starts to show signs of holiday glut), and a comrade in arms against the trying mental blows inflicted by Christmases with the respective familial units.

The peak enjoyment of the relationship phase of the cycle is the New Year's kiss:


the promise of which is for a new life in a new year with new prospects and new resolutions...aww.

Then, promptly at the stroke of midnight plus one, this occurs:


Overly drunk, the tiniest of cracks begin to emerge in the veneer of the relationship...and thus begins the slide.

Stubborn and possibly hopeful, the relationship phase slogs on through Valentine's Day...love's "filing day." Forced to make proclamations about the state of the relationship, both parties put on a happy face and exchange meaningless (and temporary) gifts. Overpriced flowers then slowly die, and with them so does the relationship phase.

Flash forward to D-Day. Also known as St. Patrick's Day. The first drinking holiday of the spring tends to unleash some demons. Pent up frustrations, combined with cabin fever and too much Jameson are a caustic mix for a tenuous coupling.

this:
plus this:

leads to this:
aaaand, cue break-up.


The Single Phase:


The next few months are called "the open season."  This period from April to June is the time to sew those wild oats.  All the sluts and fatties you want, just remember the moped rule.

"Nobody looks cool riding one of these things and your friends will be required to make fun of you if they see it."

The one night stand reigns supreme!  It's also time to work off those "hopelessly devoted" pounds and get back to the "single and ready to mingle" lady slaying monster you once were.


By late June of early July, you should now be mentally and physically ready to actually "date" girls again.  The quality of the ladies in question is on the rise and one night stands might turn into hanging out by the pool with friends the next day.


At this point you should begin to build a groundwork for the culling that will take place after labor day.

The Ambiguous Phase:

By September there are usually two or three contenders for the title of "ambiguous relationship."


see here.

As you work your way through October, the ambiguities should start to subside, but neither party is probably ready to have the "Define the Relationship" or DTR talk yet.  This will only happen after a particularly sexually charged Halloween weekend...

aaaaaand lather, rinse, repeat.

There you have it, the Dating Cycle.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

30 DAY SONG CHALLENGE: Day 10 - A song that makes you fall asleep

Well, I still have a job.  It was touch and go there for a while.  I was actually working and stuff to try to "demonstrate value" or whatever. Today is Black Friday. The pink slips went out, and I didn't get one so clearly as a show of solidarity and respect for the job that I got to keep, I should post an inane blog update about music...

I'd rather be lucky than good any day.  Here's to being lucky!  Here, here!

There's not a whole lot of music that actually puts me to sleep.  There is however, music that I can go to sleep to.  I still remember seventh grade, trying to find a comfortable way to sleep on my side while still keeping my earphones on as I pumped in disaffected anthem after disaffected anthem.  The Mallrats Soundtrack with the likes of Weezer, Bush, and Sublime mixed with Silverchair's Frogstomp provided the lullaby's for young emotionally fragile Colin.  Those were the (angsty) days.

Now that I'm a little longer in the tooth, more refined if you will (don't worry, you don't have to), I like my disaffection a little less obvious and a little more sonically subdued.



The National struck a chord with me from the very first time I heard their 2007 LP Boxer. Matt Berringer's tales of love lost and bridges burned sing to my forever awkward teenage soul.  The songs seem to simmer just under the boiling point of screaming.  The quiet desperation of that entire album has rocked me to sleep on many a lonely night, but Start a War and Fake Empire are my favorites.



I recently saw them perform at the Ryman Theater in Nashville, TN.  I convinced a friend to get the tickets directly from the box office so we would get good seats and boy did she come through.  Fourth row for all the glory!  I'll guarantee that no one went to sleep during that show!  They bristled with raw emotion from beginning to end. A bottle of wine may have helped release some of the on stage antics, but the simmer they maintained in the recording studio bubbled over live.  It was incredible to witness. As a final treat, they sent us home with a completely unplugged version of Vanderlyle Crybaby Geeks from their newest effort, High Violet. In a word: Priceless.

Luckily, you don't have to take my word for it.  Someone a row behind us captured the whole thing and posted it to the interwebs!  I love technology!!!



Yeah, that's my head in the foreground of the video!

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Feels Like Football

Taking a break from the ole music bloggin'.

After three weeks of record high temperatures, when I walked out of my office for lunch this afternoon, I was delighted by the crisp breeze that greeted me.  Don't get me wrong, it's still hot as balls down here in sweet home Alabama, but as it does every year, that first fall breeze brings with it the pavlovian urge to get liquored up and watch gigantic men run headlong into one another.

I have no commentary this year.  I have no predictions.  I am just truly happy that tis the season once again.  I may not even make it to Auburn this year for a game, but rest assured I will find time to grill some burgers, drink some Evan Green Label, and watch some football.

War Eagle,
CHB '05

Thursday, August 19, 2010

30 DAY SONG CHALLENGE: Day 09 - A song you can dance to

Whew...this one took a while.  Sorry for the delay, we'll call it writer's block...

So those of you who who've seen me on stage or on a dance floor, know without a doubt that I can't dance at all...not one bit.  I look like an epileptic in the middle of a fit, or as one girl told me a few years ago, a drunken leprechaun with a broken foot (true story).  It's been hard to come up with a song I can dance to; really dance to...let myself go and just feel the music dance to. There is one song though, that starts my foot a-tappin' and eventually works its way up to my hips and gets that swing going.  It's called Wagon Wheel and everyone and there brother have covered it, and I love every version.

The first version I heard was done by Old Crow Medicine Show, though it is rumored that Bob Dylan himself penned it.  Look up "Bob Dylan + Wagon Wheel" on youtube, and you will not find the "original version" but you will damn sure find over 500 different videos of people covering the song...it's amazing.



Then there was Mumford and Sons...currently my favorite:


and I shit you not...Against Me!


Seducing Alice has a damn fine version of the song as well...I'm sometimes convinced it's the only reason we keep getting work.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

30 DAY SONG CHALLENGE: Day 08 - A song that you know all the words to

Day 08 - A song that you know all the words to


I was using this "Song Challenge" as a way to get over the writer's block I have been suffering from over the last year or so (hence the sparse blog). Since I wish nothing more than to have a soundtrack for my life, these topics typically inspire me pretty easily. I'm always assigning music to stories and vice versa. However, I'm the singer in a band. I literally know all the words to at least a hundred songs...most of which have no other significance than, "that is a song the band plays."


So it took me a while, but I finally remembered a good story to tell about a song I know all the words to. We will venture back across the pond for this one.  


After Vienna (see Day 6) I boarded a train for Budapest.  I had heard that it was a cheap city with some cool shit to check out, and my pocket book was reeling from London, Paris and Interlaken so I figured I'd hole up there for a while, grab a massage or two from their world famous Turkish Baths and recuperate. As with most things in life, going in with low expectations led to a fanfuckingtastic time!


I got ripped off by a cab driver immediately upon arriving in the city, but their currency being such shit, he barely took me for $10!  When I got to my hostel thinking I had gotten the deal of the century on the cab, I found out that $10 got me FOUR nights in a shared room...I was already loving Budapest.  I got settled in and met two of my 4 roommates (Anti, a Swedish DJ  and James, an English Med Student). We decided to go out and grab a couple of beers and wait for the other two roomies (Emily and Audra, two Canadian post-grads).  


We went into the first pub that we saw and to my (very pleasant) surprise, beer was only a quarter!  I bought the first round...look at me Mr. Moneybags!!!  I could feel the travel gods shining down upon me.  This was my just reward for powering through in Vienna.  


It was Anti's 26th birthday (which seemed ancient to me at the time...not so much now) so when the girls arrived, we decided to go for a "nice dinner."  I know you are tired of hearing about how cheap everything was, but no shit, white table cloth, 4 star, gourmet meal...less than $10 per person...with booze too!  I was so full from my bacon wrapped filet with potato pasta and cream sauce that I didn't think I was going to make it out.  Anti would have non of that though.


We left the restaurant (where we left a 100% gratuity...they chased after us thanking us...it was weird) and headed for a University bar around the corner.  Beer was even cheaper there...shots were taken...the night starts to get a little fuzzy.


Anti and I spotted a foozeball table.  We went over and asked the large group of twenty somethings if we could get on line for the next game.  They quickly pegged me for an American and started giving me shit about how there was no way I could beat them in a game, blah, blah, blah...I had dealt with this before...not a big deal.  I simply told them we would see.


And boy did they show me. It turns out they don't have pool tables in most bars like we do over here. They have foozeball. It's their bar sport of choice and damn if they were gonna let a yank come and walk all over them. I played like 10 games in a row, each one getting my ass handed to me by a different Hungarian. But I'm stubborn and I wasn't leaving without at least one win.  Probably an hour passed, maybe more. Anti and James took the girls home, I was all alone in this random bar in Budapest at midnight when it finally happened...I won! 9-7 after a couple of ties. At first I was scared, everyone stopped what they were doing and stared at me, then at the guy I beat.  I wondered if I had thrown down some sort of proverbial gauntlet or something. Then, defeated player, Dimitri, laughed and the rest of the crowd started lambasting him. It was all in good fun.  He said that he must buy me a drink, but none of that pussy American shit...I had to drink Unicum.


Now for those of you who have never been to Hungary, Unicum is like what jager would be like if you pissed in the bottle first, then drank it hot.  It supposedly was used for medicinal purposes back in the day and was said to ward off the common cold.  All I know is that it tasted like shit and hit my cerebral cortex like a ton of bricks.  I was feeling no pain when Dimitri suggested we go on a bar crawl and see the city.  Of course I said yes...what kind of story would this be if I just went home...


Into a cab we went.  All 11 of us. There, I learned two interesting Hungarian facts.  First, Buda and Pest used to be two cities separated by the Danube (they have since merged). I was staying on the Pest side of the river, but apparently the cool shit goes on on the Buda side.  Second, the kids still speak Esparanto which is basically "New Speak" from 1984. They apparently get extra points on their version of the ACT for being multilingual and it only takes like 6 weeks to learn the whole language.  Wikipedia and the Hungarian kids had a little different interpretations...to them it was the official language that the Kremlin used to keep all it's eastern bloc member countries in line. They used it to communicate with the cab drivers who were all from other countries (turns out even shithole countries still put immigrants to work driving cabs). 


We head to Buda and start hitting up the pubs. Now there were girls in the group. Zophia, a Hungarian English teacher, was captivated by the first real live southern boy she had met. When everyone found out I was from Alabama, I got a lot of "are you related to Forrest Gumps." At some point, someone bought a whole bottle of Unicum and we passed it back and fourth. It was around this time that I crawled on top of a massive wooden bar all "Coyote Ugly" style and led the group (and other unsuspecting patrons) in a rousing rendition of "Sweet Home Alabama." Not only did I know all the words, but they did too! It was amazing.





I woke up the next morning with a raging hangover in Zophia's bed. She was frantically trying to wake me up...apparently she had to be somewhere.  She shoved two train tickets in my hand as she pushed me out the door into the garish light of day. I struggled with my shoes and shirt and had walked at least a block before I was put back together. My watch said 9am. I found a subway and headed back home. Men and women dressed for work gave me the "sunday stare" as I stood there listlessly, reeking of booze and trying not to vomit.  


I finally made it back to the hostel and Anti and I went and got massages at the Turkish Baths...it was just as refreshing as I had hoped.  That night I showed them the glory of Unicum and we had another rager...no more "Sweet Home" though.  

Friday, July 16, 2010

30 DAY SONG CHALLENGE: Day 07 - A song that reminds you of a certain event

Day 07 - A song that reminds you of a certain event


Long one yesterday...this one's short and sweet.





The Fourth of July!


ZOMG! I love the 4th. In my family, it's damn near a more important holiday than Christmas or Thanksgiving.  All our holidays are spent on Gantt Lake, but the 4th is the only one where the water is warm enough to swim and ski and innertube. I have spent every 4th of July at that lake cabin save for 3...once I was in Amsterdam (that was pretty fun actually), once I stayed in Huntsville (worst idea ever), and once I was at the Boy Scout National Jamboree.


And at that jamboree, you'll never guess who played a song right before the fireworks...wait, you did guess it?
Yes, it was Lee Greenwood and It. Was. Awesome.


The last 3 years I have purchased an ever increasing amount of fireworks and put on my own explosive extravaganza. Each show starts with the singing of the national anthem and then we play God Bless the U.S.A. I will continue to do this to the absolute end of my means...so all you Andalusians, just root for me getting more raises and the show will get better and better each year!  




America! Fuck Yeah!


I was gonna stop there, but then again, brevity has never been my thing.

On July 4th, in the year of our Lord 1999, the 223rd year of the independence of our Republic, when gas was still a dollar and the internet still consisted of AOL "chatrooms" and AskJeeves, there was a boy.  That boy was me.  I was 16.  

My parents threw a party to celebrate our forefathers' refusal to pay taxes.  The teenagers threw a separate party on the fringes of their party, nicking beers here and there as we could, grabbing a bottle of harder spirits if the situation presented itself. Grills blazed and music blared all day and into the night.  One stolen beer turned to fifty and our little party started to veer wildly out of control. 

There were five of us hiding out behind the house, smoking cigarettes on the sly, when one girl started giggling uncontrollably and pointing to a large dirt pile that had been dredged from the lake the winter before.  Behind it, but in plain view to us, was a bare ass a thrustin'...givin' it hell piston style...shining like a full moon (pun intended) under an orange street lamp.  Things went downhill from there.  

Eventually the party petered out (damn I'm punny) and it came time to get the dirt pile doinker back to his house.  It was laaaate.  like 3a.m. which by high school standards is clearly an "all nighter."  I deposited him at his house and on the way home I had to go under a bridge.  The law clearly says "idle speed only." However, at the time my boat was being a little uppity and didn't like to idle so I went slow, but not slow enough it would turn out.  

My heart fell into the lake as I saw the terrifying blue lights behind me.  Two minutes later I was giving Ranger Rick the Marine Police Officer permission to board my vessel.  My parents are sticklers about littering and as such there was a plethora of empty alcoholic containers strewn on the deck of the pontoon.  Ranger Rick had to literally kick cans out of the way as we went through all the safety features of the boat and did the whole "cop dance."

Keep in mind that I had been drinking...not only had I been drinking, I had been drinking ALL DAY, in the sun, and I WAS SIXTEEN!  I was drunk...probably visibly.  He finally addressed the pink elephant on the boat and I explained my parentals' policy on throwing cans.  To which he responded, "how civic minded of them."  Points RR for snarkiness!

He gets the coveted "coolest cop award" for letting me off. I should have been put under the jail, but in what we will call a Chrismakah miracle, I went on my way.  I'm very careful about the Marine Police to this day...you only get one "get out of BUI" card in a lifetime.

Seriously, how embarrassing would it be to go to jail for a BUI? 

Thursday, July 15, 2010

THE 30-DAY SONG CHALLENGE Day 06 - A song that reminds of you of somewhere

Day 06 - A song that reminds of you of somewhere

Day 26 - Vienna: mood...catatonic. 
Every journal entry from Europe started the same way:
Day __ - city: mood...    _  
Sometimes I would add what songs I was listening to that day as well, but not this time.  I had been "on continent" by myself for a little over three weeks.  I had another five and a half to go and I hit my first wall.  Three and a half weeks of walking, going to museums and castles, drinking, eating, and merrymaking had taken it's toll.  The night before I had nearly had to sleep on the streets...

Ok, wait, let me back up.  I guess I need to start at the beginning...
__________________________________________________

Day 25 - Vienna: mood...relieved (and a little freaked out)
I rolled into the Austrian capital around 11p.m. after a nice little weekend get away with three girls from Minnesota in Salzburg.  They were a refreshingly wholesome lot, considering the vagabonds I had been hanging with to the point, and our little Sound of Music tour had been quaint if nothing else.  On the train I saw a ridiculously cool double rainbow (swear to god...not just referencing this).  I took it as a sign for good things ahead.  There had been an issue at the internet cafe earlier that morning about reserving a bed in the hostel I wanted in Vienna, but I felt sure I would be able to secure lodging...I was 10 feet tall and bullet proof.  I was a citizen of the world.

So as I said, I got in at 11p.m.  The train station was overrun with bums and gutter punks.  Honestly, it was the seediest scene I had walked through yet.  I made a beeline for the recommended hostel, careful not to make eye contact or invite any kind of confrontation whatsoever. 

The hostel was about a 2 mile hike from the train station...something that by this time, I was fully capable of doing in about 25 minutes without breaking a sweat. It was a nice, cool early summer night and I was truckin' it.  The neighborhood was deteriorating quickly and I was (for the first time) beginning to question my guidebook. I kept going though and soon enough, I found the hostel. Exhausted from a long day of travelling and the brisk hike through RapyMcMurderville, I collapsed into a sofa as I waited for the night time attendant to come down and give me a room key.  Eventually, a bleary eyed blonde hippie chick made her way to the counter and I went up and started the ritual of broken German phrases until she finally said, "enough, I get it. Sorry, but we're full."  

Well shit.  I hadn't been in this situation before...She said they had a big group moving out the next day and that I'd be able to get a room at noon.  The only other "reputable" hostel was 5 miles away through a straight up ghetto, and it being so late, cabs wouldn't even come through there.  What was I to do?  

No worries she said!  Just go to the bar across the street tell the bartender you need a place to sleep for the night.  "The regulars typically take our overflow," she said.  At this point, a couch at a random Austrian stranger's house sounded way more appealing than the alternatives so go across the street to the bar I did.

It was one of those dank holes-in-the-wall that years of cigarette smoke and spilled beer had formed a protective sheen over.  The neon bar lights flickered, keeping time to the droning din of working class melancholy.  As I walked in, backpack and all, the needle skipped off the record and all eyes were on me.  Without glancing around, but feeling the burning stares of the sad sacks that populated "Bar Nowhere," I walked straight up to the bartender and said one word with a hopefully non-threatening shrug..."accommodation?"

He repeated my word...mocking my confused and kinda scared body language.  Somewhere from the bowels of the place I heard a gruff, "Da."  The metaphorical record started spinning again and emboldened by the quick response to my need, I shimmied back to the very last table in the darkest part of the bar, where my savior awaited.

She seemed old...60's by the look of her, which in hard labor years put her around 35.  She weighed at least 350lbs and had a giant mole on the right side of her chin that had started sprouting it's own head of little blonde hairs. She took one look at me, looked back at her half full pint of lager, downed the beer, stood up and walked out with just the slightest acknowledgement that I should follow her. I still felt the laser beam stares as the door shut behind me, but the cool night air immediately washed away the feeling of despair that had permeated that place.  

We walked 200 feet to another door that led to an elevator that went to the fifth floor that housed her apartment.  The halls were barely wide enough for her massive hips to swing without bumping into the sides.  The lighting was so low, that I could just barely make out her shadow as she lumbered own in front of me.  We came to a door at the end of the hallway and she turned and said her first words to me..."ten euro."  I produced the note and she opened the door.  She motioned to her left to a bathroom and then to the right where there was a couch and a blanket.  I thanked her and quickly collapsed again into a sofa.  Within seconds I was out.  The burlap bag that passed for a blanket tucked snuggly under my chin.  It was 2a.m.

I awoke the next morning staring at the freakishly hairy back of a 250lb man... gorilla would actually be a better description.  CNN international was blaring on the tv and he was sitting in a folding chair right in front of the couch. I tried to stay still, but he noticed me shifting and saw that I was awake. he just turned to me and stared...I was clearly in his seat.  He said something in German that I took to mean, "get the fuck out of my house you little American weasel."  He might have said, "good morning young man, can I offer you some coffee or breakfast?"  but you know, German is a harsh language...all consonants.  I always think I'm being cursed out.  I scrambled for my shoes and pack and peaced out of there with a quickness.  I found a cafe and spent the rest of my time till noon drinking coffee and reading one of the international papers.  

I got to the hostel, I got a bed, finally did my first load of laundry, and booked hostels in every city I would be in for the next month!  There would be no more random barfly sleeping for me!!!!

That night I went to bed early for the first time on my trip. I just couldn't bring myself to go down for drinks with my fellow travellers...couldn't muster the energy it takes to be charming enough to make friends on the spot...again.  
__________________________________________________   

So on to the original post...

Day 26 - Vienna: Mood...catatonic.
The previous night's adventures had taken a toll on me.  I got crazy homesick.  I couldn't stomach the idea of one more day of sight seeing or one more night in a shitty hostel bar, running game on some Australian chick.  The futility of it all was the only thing I could focus on.  

It was well past noon when one of the other guys sharing the room came back in.  He saw me laying on my back staring forlornly at the wire mesh of the bunk above me.  He started to turn and leave, but something made him come back.  He pulled up a chair and sat down next to me.  

"Are you alright?" he asked...genuinely concerned.

"Sure man, I've just had a rough couple of hours and I'm a little beat...nothing to be concerned about."

"How long have you been here?"

I told him I had been there for a day and a half, but he was inquiring how long I had been travelling.  I looked in my journal and responded, "26 days."

He looked at me and put his hand on my shoulder and said, "Get up. Get moving. Don't quit."  

I looked him right in the eye and told him in no uncertain terms to fuck off

But he didn't give up so easily.  He told me that he too had been struck by a mid trip crisis, an existential hiccup, "the wayfarin' blues" if you will. He told me that it happened to damn near everyone that was on the road for a significant amount of time.  He repeated himself, "Get up. Get moving. Don't quit."  

Finally, I did just that.  I got up, got dressed and headed out the door.  I bought him lunch and we toured some Roman ruins.  I put on a happy face for this guy who wanted so much for me to beat the blues, but inside I was miserable...woohoo, another set of ruins...woohoo, more marble statues on the street...woohoo, the Hapsburg's main castle...woo. fuckin'. hoo. 

I somehow made it through most of the day without pitching a bitch and there was just one final destination on St. Getthefuckup's to-do list that day.  It was Schloss Schoenbrunn, a magnificent summer palace on the edge of town. 

As soon as I stepped off the bus and walked into the courtyard I could feel the history of the place all around me. I got vestigial whiffs of horses as I imagined it filled with carriages and the nobility they conveyed.  I could hear baroque quartets in the distance and felt the joy of leaving the bustle of the city for this grandiose mansion.  I wandered away from my new companion, lost for the first time that day in the majesty of old Europe.  I was still feeling a little down, but at least I was interested.  

I bypassed the interior of the house and began walking through the gardens to the rear of the castle.  I put in my ear buds and hit shuffle on the iPod.  I walked through a hedge maze and watched the children dart this way and that as their parents looked on from an observation platform.  I strolled alongside more Roman ruins from an equally grand palace from antiquity.  I stopped and smelled the fucking roses.  

While I was engrossed in my music and the scenery, the sky went from soft blue to ominous black.  I kept getting further and further away from shelter...paying no attention to the gathering storm.  By the time the first grape sized raindrop struck my shoulder, I was several hundred yards away from the mezzanine.  

I took cover under a grove of Renaissance era chestnut trees that lined the gravel avenues of the gardens.  There was a concrete bench there and I sat down as the bottom fell out of the sky.  First, tremendous gusts of wind whipped down the paths creating dust devils that chased fleeing tourists into the palace for cover.  Everyone was running this way or that, frantic, trying to avoid the oncoming rains.  Before long, the storm came in ernest.  The cold rain dropped the temperature around me dramatically, but no water came through the ancient, leafy boughs above.  Just then, as I watched the carnage unfold around me with detatched amusement, I noticed The Drive-By Truckers were playing a song in my head...


The sultry drawl of Mike Cooley's voice on top of the ringing acoustic guitars served to "enhance" the mood of the day. (See Day 4) The wail of the slide guitar wept of lives lived and lost. I was almost all the way through the song before I even began listening to the words...I barely caught the last line of the last chorus, "Now she's found herself and I've lost mine/and I'm just another guy who can't give her anything." I immediately hit repeat and listened closer this time. "Dreams are given to us when we're young enough to dream 'em, 'fore they can do us any harm/They don't start to hurt until we try to hold on to 'em, after seein' what they really are." The song, the day, the rain, the blues...it all just fit so perfectly together that it seemed almost by Providence. After the rains abated, I gathered my things and headed back into town.  I found my counselor and we went out on the town.  Yet another night of drunken debauchery ensued and by the next morning, I was over the hump and ready to rush out and take on the world for one more round. 

I can't help but think of Vienna when I hear that song.  Not only Vienna in general, but specifically that concrete bench under that chestnut tree in that garden of that palace in that rain storm.  It's a tactile memory!  I hope I never forget it.  It's funny that a band that embodies the state of Alabama in a way that few others would ever hope to achieve also holds, for me, a promise of a larger world beyond it's borders. And Therein lies the beauty of a well written song.  

"And 'Lord knows I can't change' sounds better in the song than it does with hell to pay."