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To August, and the Songs That Saved Me

How Music Helped Me Rediscover Joy Amid the Silence

By GoldenSpeechPublished about a year ago 3 min read

"Dear August,"

For so long, I had lived my life in silence. Not literal silence, of course — the world around me buzzed with activity, conversations, and distant echoes of laughter. But inside, where it mattered, there was nothing. A hollow quietness that stretched across days, weeks, and eventually, years.

Music had always been a bridge for me — a lifeline when the static grew too loud, a soft refuge when my thoughts turned sharp. But then, somewhere along the way, I lost it. My headphones collected dust on my nightstand, and my playlists became relics of a past self I could no longer recognize.

It was August when I stumbled upon “August” by Taylor Swift. The irony of it wasn’t lost on me — the song crackled through my speakers, soft and fleeting like summer sunlight slipping through faded curtains. “August sipped away like a bottle of wine…”

I sat there, frozen, as if Taylor herself had reached through the song and pressed a finger against the bruise on my heart that I’d been ignoring. For the first time in what felt like forever, I allowed myself to listen. Really listen.

I let the melody wrap itself around me, each lyric peeling away the carefully constructed armor I had built over time. It wasn’t about romance or heartbreak, not really — it was about loss. About the ache of moments slipping away before you’ve had the chance to hold onto them. And oh, how many moments I had let slip through my fingers.

The weeks that followed felt different. The world didn’t magically become easier, nor did my struggles evaporate like morning mist. But there was a thread — a faint hum beneath the noise — that carried me forward. I started rebuilding my playlists, one song at a time.

“Vienna” by Billy Joel whispered to me on sleepless nights, reminding me to slow down, to breathe, to allow myself to exist without needing to justify every second.

“Fix You” by Coldplay cradled me on days when the weight felt unbearable, when the cracks in my resolve threatened to break me apart.

And then, there was “Brave” by Sara Bareilles — a battle cry that played in my ears when I stood at crossroads, terrified of taking the next step but knowing I couldn’t stay still forever.

Each song became a marker, a chapter title in the story I was slowly learning to rewrite. They weren’t just background noise; they were companions. They were lifelines.

One morning, I found myself sitting in a sunlit café, watching people rush past the window. My playlist shuffled, and “Happy” by Pharrell Williams began to play. For a second, I almost skipped it — too bright, too cheerful for a day that felt so… ordinary. But then I stopped myself. I let it play.

I sat there, tapping my fingers against the ceramic mug in my hand, and realized something that brought tears to my eyes: I was happy. Not overwhelmingly so, not in a way that demanded grand gestures or fireworks, but in a quiet, steady way. The kind of happiness that sneaks up on you and settles into your bones before you even realize it’s there.

Music, once again, had stitched me back together.

If life is a soundtrack, then mine is filled with crescendos and silences, with heartbreaking ballads and triumphant anthems. It’s messy and imperfect, skipping beats and lingering on notes that shouldn’t hold weight — but it’s mine. Every song, every lyric, every fleeting melody is a reminder that I am still here. That I kept going.

So, to August — and to every song that carried me through the silence — thank you.

I hope, wherever you are, you find your song too.

With love,

Me

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About the Creator

GoldenSpeech

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  • Marie381Uk about a year ago

    I like this nice work

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