D is for “Dress Rehearsal”
Few things move me more than the marriage of good music to brilliant lyrics. It’s a matrimony that stirs within something akin to what I imagine a religious awakening might feel like: a shimmer at a cellular level as the soul syncs with the universe for a glimmering, timeless moment.
Taylor Swift’s music might have that effect on some, while for others it might be the Tenors or the Beatles. For me, it’s the Tragically Hip, our very own Canadian rock band. The Hip’s lead singer Gord Downie wrote profound poems and set them to soul-stirring tunes. He offers so many quote-worthy lines, but the one that keeps surfacing for me is that this is “no dress rehearsal—this is our life.” At the beginning of a new year, I find myself doubling down on the meaning behind Downie’s impactful lyrics in the Hip’s song “Ahead by a Century.”
Life doesn’t only happen once you get all your lines, blocking, costumes and props just right with the spotlight beaming down on your made-up face while you strike a choreographed pose at centre stage. No, real life is much more of an improv gig. The director isn’t external but internal, and as such, it is within one’s control to elicit a worthy performance. As for critics? Yes, they exist in both theatres, the literal and the metaphorical. They always do, and while some will offer helpful constructive feedback, others will not. The challenge is to recognize the difference. Just one of many challenges on the set of Real Life.
As Shawnigan Lake School is only four weeks away from the opening night of this year’s musical, Grease, the cast and crew are only days away from their real dress rehearsal (sounds like an oxymoron, doesn’t it?). What has been within their control up till now is all the dedication – individually and collectively – to delivering an outstanding show. What is out of their control is, well, we won’t know until the moment it happens, and yet why would one even speculate on such potential doom? Because that’s life (not to mention, that’s what makes headlines).
“And that’s where the hornet stung me,” says Downie, and his response: “Tonight, we smoke them out.” So when unscripted doom enters stage left, you might actually be able to conquer it. One thing that may not stand out at first glance in this empowering message is the simple little word “we.” Such a small word, but in it lies the key to living a successful life where hornets sting and dress rehearsals don’t exist. The key in “we” is that I am not alone. When Downie says, “You tilted my hand,” the image of Michelangelo’s famous fresco “The Creation of Adam” comes to mind, where two hands stretch across the heavens and fingers almost touch: connection. If we reach out, a hand will respond and extend in our direction. Especially in a life where there are no dress rehearsals, we are wise to enlist in the support of others.
As we usher in a new year, I suspect some of us will be “listening to our thoughts / with illusions of someday / cast in a golden light,” Downie’s poetic way of giving a nod to our dreams and ambitions. This is typically a time of year when we recalibrate our behaviours to lead to more positive outcomes in the realm(s) of health, career, hobbies, finance, relationships, or what have you. May 2024 empower you to enlist the support you need to “smoke out the hornets” and may you bask in your own “golden light.” And through honest reflection and positive intention, may we one day be “ahead by a century.”
“Ahead by a Century”
By the Tragically Hip
First thing we’d climb a tree
And maybe then we’d talk
Or sit silently
And listen to our thoughts
With illusions of someday
Cast in a golden light
No dress rehearsal
This is our life
And that’s where the hornet stung me
And I had a feverish dream
With revenge and doubt
Tonight, we smoke them out
You are ahead by a century
You are ahead by a century
You are ahead by a century
Stare in the morning shroud
And then the day began
I tilted your cloud
You tilted my hand
Rain falls in real time
And rain fell through the night
No dress rehearsal, this is our life
But that’s when the hornet stung me
And I had a serious dream
With revenge and doubt
Tonight, we smoked them out
You are ahead by a century
You are ahead by a century
You are ahead by a century
You are ahead by a century
You are ahead by a century
You are ahead by a century
And disappointing you is gettin’ me down
Cari Bell retired from Shawnigan in spring 2023 after 23 years as an English teacher, including time as Head of the English Department and Director of Professional Development. Unable to sever the ties completely, she continues to work with the School in a consulting capacity.