So many Prince memories ... and one major regret - Action News
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So many Prince memories ... and one major regret

CBC's Melinda Dalton laments the one last time she could have seen Prince, and didn't.

Hundreds of Montrealers saw Prince one last time last month I did not

Montreal photographer Susan Moss snapped this photo of Prince at his show at the Metropolis in 2011. (Submitted by Susan Moss)

I was in Quebec City heading into the provincialbudget lockup last Marchwhen the all-caps email hit my inbox: PRINCEwas performing a last minute, intimate show at Montreal's teeny (by Prince standards)Thtre Maisonneuve.

Now, I've been an unrepentant Prince fan for as long as I can recall.

Thosesynth rhythms are so woven into the memories of my teenage years I can't divorce one from another.

I can still remember plotting with my best friend how to get to his limited Vegas run when we both had barely enough money to make rent. It never worked out, which was probably for the best, given that eviction is never as minor as it seems when making rash decisions.

I didn't actually get to a show until he made a stop in my hometown ofLondon, Ont. a few years back.

I flew in from Montreal just for the occasion, and it was every bit asmagical asIimagined it would be: the smoke machines, the falsetto, the glowing stage on whichPrince seemed to erupt out ofnowhere.

I was in the nosebleeds. I didn't care.

I could barely see the stage at that Prince show in London, Ont. but it didn't matter. I knew I wouldn't forget it. (Melinda Dalton/CBC)

I danced and snapped grainy photos of the stage, as one doesin the midst of an experience they desperately want toremember forever.

It was fleeting. I knew it.

So when news of his piano-accompaniedsolo performance in Montreal arrived last month, I immediately checked for ticket prices.

And then I gasped.

Don't get me wrong. The Prince experience was always worth every penny.

But, putting on my very best adult decision-makinghat,I just couldn't justify the price.

Those tickets were going for hundreds.

I passed by the theatre on the way home from work and tried to subdue the pangs of regret.

I'd see him next time, I told myself.

Today, when someone in our newsroom exclaimed that Prince was dead, I remembered that vow.

I wasn't alone:

I've heard this lament a lot, recentlythose who passed up the chance to seeDavid Bowie (I did too), those who gave away their ticket to the show whenB.B. King rolled into townor who thought Michael Jackson would probably tour forever.

In those regrets is a lesson we all need to remember once in awhile.

In thinking about that decision, I pondered the scores ofdecisions I make every day rescheduling catch-ups with old friends under the crush of other commitments, putting off a phone call I could easily have made right away.

I wish I had just spent the money and delayedsome other purchase I've already forgotten I made.

I wish I had gone.

I'm not advocating careless and frivolousspendingbut sometimes, taking an extra moment to consider how once-in-a-lifetime some experiencesreally are, can't be a bad thing.

You don't get a second shot at everything.

And remembering that lesson is probably the most profound thing Prince could ever have leftme with.

(Arlene Slavin/Rubin Fogel Productions)