The Way I See It #267

I’ve always been a package reader. Even as a kid, I loved to read cereal boxes at the breakfast table, milk carton advertisements and especially the jokes on Bazooka Gum wrappers. The years haven’t changed my curiosity: Did you know that Chester Cheetah recommends you stick extra chips behind your ears for safe keeping, just in case you have a hankering later in the day? If you don’t believe me, buy a bag of Flaming Hot Cheetos (personal favorite) and search for Chester’s recognizable mug.

Lately, my favorite source of package-wit has been provided by Starbucks. I love reading “The Way I See It” quotes on the side of their cups, forever disappointed when I get a repeat. These little excerpts are just insights from average people, average Starbucks consumers, about most everything under the sun.

Today I had my usual latte’ and, as I was waiting for a friend, read #267:

Music can lift us out of depression or move us to tears - it is a remedy, a tonic, orange juice for the ear. But for many of my neurological patients, music is even more - it can provide access, even when no medication can, to movement, to speech, to life. For them, music is not a luxury, but a necessity.

Oliver Sacks (Neurologist and author of The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain).

This is so right on, isn’t it? Every time I listen to Better Than Ezra’s “Desperately Wanting” my chest gets tight, my eyes tear over and I imagine what it would be like to forget about my responsibilities, kick my shoes off and dance around in a public fountain, clothes and all. The song resonates so deeply with my desire to live risky and freely. Over the Rhine’s “Latter Day” forces me to face old wounds, painful experiences and somehow realize that there were small glimmers of hope that I may have missed in the midst of those eras. I’m moved to admit that I would rather be hurt and healed than unscathed to begin with. And with Ray Lamontagne, I don’t even need to comprehend his poignant lyrics to be moved by his strange rugged/velvet voice.

Sometimes a song is able to so expertly prick my skin that I can only listen to it at night, when nobody is around to examine my reactions. This is when a song becomes a conduit through which I dream big dreams and believe their fruition possible. I hate when those three minutes are over.

So, yes… music is not a luxury for me. It is a necessity.

What a challenge, then, to musicians: to realize that we wield such power in our guitars, our pianos, our violins, our voices. For us to know that all the chicken-scratch-on-restaurant-napkin-turned-to-song moments might evolve into instances of clarity for our listeners, might bring a broken heart to healing years down the road. What if a song I write late at night ends up being the backdrop for someone’s first kiss? What if a song you write ends up being repeated thousands of times by a divorcee who needs to know she’s not alone? What if our lyrics inspire some sort of positive social change? Or what if a song I write pushes someone over the edge?

I’m going through my own creative writing process now. It has been difficult because I don’t want to go the easy route with my lyrics. I want my music to be meaningful and personal to people I may never meet.

And to be honest, I’m not sure I’ve even come close to tapping into the magic of music and all the possibilities.

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