20 August 2023

Benjamin P. Toche




Benjamin P. Toche

 August 7th, 1981 – July 22nd, 2023


In the back of the cab, tucked under the front passenger seat, is a paper coffee cup that says, “Thank you for composting me.”  That is how we can begin to talk about the life and death of a man named Benjamin Pere Toche.  Like the cup, he was polite, articulate, “trash” as he would say, useful, ironic, self-effacing, a vessel for holding, and also stuffed under the seat in a nondescript cab, hoping for someone to see him.  And fulfill his request.

He was so many other things, too.  More than we can list here.  We know we can’t get it right with these words or do him justice.  But we’re going to try anyway and we’ll use some of his own words to help.

On August 7th, 1981, Ben emerged onto the world stage at Singing River Hospital in Pascagoula, Mississippi.  His mother was studying to become an RN and his father was a day laborer who toiled outside, his skin so mahogany that once he’d been denied service in a shop as the proprietor mistook him for black.  

Ben lived in Pascagoula with his parents and two older brothers, Francis and Jude, in a rented, brick-façaded home with a carport on Chicago Drive.  He remembered tooling around inside this house on a tricycle, like some kind of inchoate Nascar driver.  There was a window in his room, outside of which was a bush — the plant he would “get a switch” from when he’d misbehaved.  The bush’s fingers thrashed against the nighttime windowpane, often causing him to retreat to mom’s room for solace.  His mom’s bed was nice, warm, and comforting, and she’d put a towel down in case he’d piss himself; and if he did, she never judged or shamed him.  He often wondered if mothers, in all their sacrifice, knew how thoroughly they ruined their sons for everyone else on the planet. 

His education was Southern and public, after which he spent five years in the Marine Corps as an Arabic linguist. During his service, he found himself within a group of wandering young men and women who shared the hope that the military would be their ticket away from something, to somewhere they could not get on their own.  And Ben made a lasting impression.  The friendships he formed became some of his longest; as a fellow Marine said, “Every time was the best time when we were all together.” It was not all good times, though.  Because he never deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan, he was conflicted about his service.  He was glad to have escaped TBI and PTSD and maybe even death, for a while, but ashamed and embarrassed, after all that training and conviction, as he felt unused. Regardless, Ben — and his service mates in return — would eschew trite bullshit and say, lovingly, “Semper Fi, motherfuckers.”

Ben fell in love exactly three times, was married exactly three times, and divorced (almost) exactly three times.  He spoke of these relationships reverently and often, as his heart was brimful with love, but he also knew that love to be unwieldy.  Although he was sometimes clumsy with it, that love did produce three sons that Ben is, heartbreakingly, leaving behind.  Gavin, 18, whom Ben was so proud to watch become a man.  Kiernan, 16, in whom Ben saw so much of himself, which was both frightening and wonderful.  And Ulysses, 7, a child whose beauty and intelligence consistently astonished Ben.  Funnily enough, when Ben was a boy, he remembered telling schoolmates that he wanted to be a dad of nine because he wanted to field a baseball team.  His heart certainly contained enough love for all nine of those imagined children; he just overlaid it across three.

And Ben wrote.  He was beyond prolific.  In 2010, he applied to an MFA program and was accepted.  Upon attending, he was thrust into a world filled with “real, genuine people with hypersensitive thoughts and feelings about fucking books, man.”  This experience changed his life; Ben once stated, “The impression my MFA friends made on me and the support they’ve shown to me and my life has buoyed me through much suicidal ideation, and they deserve my thanks and apologies for lacking in my own friendship with them.”  Which everyone will tell you is just not true.  Ben buoyed others far more than he will ever know, likely much more than we buoyed him.  

On July 22nd, 2023, Ben died of a broken heart.  That is to say, in 1981 a child was born with a heart too big for all this beauty and a temperament too tender to bear the weight of it.  He would say that nothing worked out like he thought it would.  Being a father didn’t go the way he envisioned it. Nor did being a husband or partner. Ben, like the rest of us, was thwarted by idealistic expectations. He said once, “I really thought someone would be able to live with me, handle all my faults, accept my failings, and we would raise a beautiful and lovely family all on our own.  But that seems an impossible thing.”  He has now rendered true what should still be unknown. 

Ben had an abundance of love.  The people in his life loved him for the eccentric, dichotomous, warm, funny, dark, brilliant, wondrous man that he was.  In addition to that, he spent most of his adult life working in careers that allowed him to provide guidance and care to those without certain advantages, to the mentally ill, and to the disabled, and they beamed warmth and gratitude back at him.  And for his friends and family, he listened to our problems too, loved us, and offered guidance and help.  He was the Patron Saint of The Unwell, shouldering the burden of all our pain and strife, and we loved him immensely for that.  And for everything else.  But sadly, Ben struggled to accept that love, nor could he provide himself the same level of care he extended to others.  If he was here to read this, he would tell us to shut the fuck up.  Because, folks, beauty is embarrassing.  And he was embarrassed to call himself beautiful.  To believe himself as beautiful on this earth.  But he was.  Spectacularly.  So, he can shut the fuck up right back.  

Well, he already has.

Despite this abundance of love, he felt alone.  He felt alone as a child. He felt alone as a man. He felt alone as a father.  That is a thing that happens.  Hugs, friend.  For that we are truly sorry.

He died somewhere between more years than he thought he could give and not as many as the rest of us needed.  But he’s not in pain anymore.  He’s not here anymore.  He’s somewhere else.  In fact, as we imagine him now, he is on his couch in the house on Beaver Ave in Palmer, Alaska, Andrea, his wife, sitting at the piano playing Satie’s Gymnopédie No. 1, Uly not yet awake. There’s the fat orange cat, Captain Lawrence Edward Grace “Titus” Oates, basking on the sofa in the low angled morning November sun. There is a convincing air of mystery in the atmosphere. This is a dreamscape.

And later that day, in Ben’s own words:

I watched Uly eat a dried fig and it was positively VanGoghian. I could see the fibers snaking out of the fig’s tooth-pierced flesh in the golden afternoon backblast of overcast skies. Then we went for an excursion in the backyard and asked the spirit of the decaying jack-o-lantern of that year’s Halloween a singular question to which the pumpkin must be truthful in answering.

“How do you get up the hill,” Uly asked in a rising boyish voice.

“Don’t ask that,” I said, “He only tells the truth for the first question. The other ones he might lie, and you already know how to get up the hill. It’s right there.” I pointed with my coozied beer.

“Ask it another question, Uly-bear. A big one. Like, what does it all mean? Or, why are we here?” Andrea suggested.

“Who knows if he’ll tell you what’s right,” I said.

Uly, in his black snow-pant bibs and green hat and red jacket and yellow and black mittens grabbed the planter box’s wooden edge and faced the crumbling and moldy child-faced jack-o-lantern, the one of his own design, once more. “How does wood become wood?”

I looked around me. The inclined backyard that is the backdrop to our quaint, cedar paneled home on Beaver Avenue lay dotted with juvenile cottonwoods, the same ones in which my oldest two boys, Gavin and Kiernan, played pretend, fending off imagined enemies from their forest fortress, in a three-month removed summer that seemed forever ago when I saw them in the throes of their childhoods, still reaching for the true meaning of play. I put my hand against the trunk of the closest tree before launching into a monologue about how photosynthesis creates glucose and glucose becomes energy and how the ever-expanding circumference of a tree was the only truly living layer of that structure with the basement floors being continually converted into a dead carbon backbone on which the living crust seethed.

Then we went down and took the cat inside and made tamales, goopy ones, but ones still excellent in taste and almost preferable to the more toothy of masas and we ate and drank and now it’s Lana Del Rey again and golden tones and love and it’s too too good.

To Ben, we’d like to say…maybe you should have let Uly ask the pumpkin how to get up the hill.  Because you didn’t make it, friend; not nearly as far as we needed you to go.  But we know it’s been a steep hike for you.  Very, very difficult.  We know you did your best.  And we know you made it as far as you could.  But that’s really frustrating, Ben. We miss you, man.  We cannot contain it.  You are such a big part of our collective fabric.  The ponchoed parts of the cloth, with llamas and ravens, eagle feathers woven in there too.  

No one wants to say goodbye.  No one knows how to say goodbye.  So we won’t.  We know you were fond of saying, “You can never go home.”  So, what we will say, sir, is:  Welcome Home.  Get the fire going.  Find some good books.  Write down what you can.  And breathe.  Go easy on yourself this time.  Nothing can hurt you now, not even you.  And don’t worry.  We’ll all be along shortly.  Save us a seat.  We’ll have so very much to talk about.  


Ben’s life will be celebrated on the 25th of August, 2023, 2:00PM, at Matanuska River Park in Palmer, Alaska, where his ashes will be composted amongst the alluvium and waters of the Matanuska River.


(written by Nicholas Dighiera and Daniel Mickelson)



28 May 2023

Don't Stop Dancing, Don't Dare Stop


The youth of the world, and I'm assuming this riverine bridge graffito was penned by someone under age 20 given the text message nature of its delivery, certainly have things on lock. "Hey, anyone notice the house was on fire? Oh, okay, you did. That's good." It's like the meme of the dog enjoying his morning coffee as everything burns around him, to include himself, as he notes that "This is fine." That's one of my favorites and I wonder how people go through the world somehow blithely ignorant of how fucked things are and I marvel at their sense of stability and seemingly stable relationships and employment situations. Increasingly, I feel like Dennis Hopper's character in Apocalypse, Now when he's ranting to Captain Willard, "Look at this shit we're in man!" and then goes on to quote Rudyard Kipling about keeping one's mind about them when everyone else has lost theirs. I wonder what side of the fence of that aphorism I fall into but I have a feeling that everyone already knows where I'm at. Hell, it's not like we keep secrets around here.

Again, also at the river, the youth have the solutions to the above pic. The rock was my contribution and, apologies for the potato quality of the picture, the heart shaped lump of granite was found out on the riverbed and was intended for placement in the apartment or for painting even but I left it with a more important message. Conversely, if you shock a dog in a cage enough and then give them the possibility of escape, the dog will not flee torture. As in Fall Out Boy's new joint, So Much (for) Stardust, (which is an absolute banger) he screams on the mic that "Heartbreak feels so good" and I'm inclined to agree with him. The record contains any number of great lines but the track that contains that line makes me weep like I've been opened up and all the raw parts of me are poked and prodded for the edification of a gallery of surgeons interested in the absurdity of the human condition. Needless to say, it's been on repeat in the earbuds.


These are, I think, forget me nots that I found at the river. They were a little more purple than I expected but I pulled up last weekend, fortuitously in front of them as I parked, and I trod up the embankment for a photo. I cried, natch, but at what I could not explain. Beauty? Sadness? The interbeing of both? The teminability of existence? The chaotic nature of sentient life? Art? Evil? Who knows? I certainly don't. Later, I walked the river and didn't cry but rather marveled at the absolute stupidity of existing. Then, I went to the bar and watched hockey and went back to the apartment and cried myself to sleep.


Look at this guy right here. Broken, yet persisting. I found this just today outside the Palmer museum. Then, I went to visit the Virgin Mary at St. Michael's and the arboretum. Someone had broken off the Virgin's hands and she stood in her blue alcove with handless arms outstretched as if she would still welcome you into her, hands or not. She stood there, looking crushed, with a garland of flowers gracing her head. At the arboretum, as noted previously, the spruce bark beetles have taken their toll of the population of spruce trees and seeing the naked stumps of felled trees like snaggletoothed grins gave me pause. There are very few spruce in the arboretum now and I went and visited with each of them, inspecting for signs of beetle invasion. Many of the remaining had early signs of infection but one in particular was near the end and I went and touched the trunk and wept like a penitent. Then I went to the bar. Natch. Gavin turned 18 last Friday. Everyday I beg for God to end me. 

14 May 2023

Goddamn You, Goddamn We, Goddamn Us All


At the new digs, the water runs brown when you open the tap and there was a Ford Focus with a smashed out back window and a ratchet strap holding down the back end that got towed away recently. Spiders inhabit the place. Ants invade through the quarter inch gap between the door and jamb and roam the shag carpet like amphibious vehicles in choppy surf. Speaking of the water, you could but probably shouldn't drink it and I don't and so I live like some unhinged hermit using bottled, distilled water from a gallon jug to brush my teeth. Food is an ongoing mystery. I will buy ready made sandwiches for 10 dollars and a bag of chips for 2.50 and this will stretch for 3 days at least. Sometimes, I find pieces of sandwich on the floor, likely the draw for the ants. You pick it up, put it away, marvel at how much you've eaten. I'm down to 148 pounds in full clothing, shoes, and daily carry.

The river is blustery and the silt whirls up like popped smoke and curls in twisted mini-cyclones along the streambed. I went there yesterday and walked the sand. Eric Satie's Gymnopedies and Gnossiennes supplied the soundtrack and I wandered around aimlessly and wept. An eagle sat perched in its nest, hopefully atop an egg or, better yet, warming a fully hatched chick. A magpie called from the bush, unseen, eventhough I addressed her. There was a rubbish pile, seemingly from a small motor repair shop and among the rubble was a notebook whose front cover was affixed with a former felon's prison ID badge. In my probabilistic stroll, I passed a man sitting on a folding chair at the treeline. He had been close enough to possibly mistake my call to the magpie as a greeting to him but said nothing as I passed by. Another enigma. Another character. Both of us NPC's in each other's MMORPG. 



Down at the river, scrawled on a bridge pylon. It is my natural inclination to agree, but reality keeps refuting my hypotheses. This idea would be so easy if it were true, and the weak part of me wishes it were, but it's not. It would be so simple to write everything off like some sullen emo-wracked teen or some degenerate divorcee. I will say that I am heartened by the goodness in the other, even someone as terrible as the North Carolina BBQ food truck woman who sounded like my mother when I asked, already knowing the answer, if the bucket of iced tea was sweet. We had a laugh and I noticed the "Trump 2024" sticker on the inside of the truck. Nice lady. Good food. The fucking duality of man.


Yesterday was busy. I saw this dummy compete in his final home soccer game for high school where he got an assist and, late in the game, had two quality scoring chances where the ball sailed on him. Not by much, but enough to clear the crossbar. Unfortunate. When I opened the Zuck machine yesterday morning in the futon bed that's too small such that my feet dangle off the edge like some Raymond Carver protagonist, I saw a bevy of varsity soccer photos and this was one of them and I laughed and I cried like some demented inmate confined to the SHU. He finished high school, not without serious forbearance on everyone but his part, and I've never been more proud of him and more fearful of how life is going to ruin him. But that's just the negativity speaking.

Go cop the new-ish Kendrick record and pre-order the new QOTSA joint.