Wednesday, January 28, 2015

The Song that Changed It All

Often when I get ready for work, I have some music playing. I have various mixes that I’ve made through the years, but sometimes I just let iTunes go on shuffle and let the magic happen on its own. I did the latter earlier this week and the song that came on stopped me in my tracks. I was taken back to the day the song came out and the very first time I heard it.

It was October of 2009. I had just transferred in to a new college. At the time, I had an on-again/off-again boyfriend from the last college I had attended. As of a few months before, we were off-again. On top of it, the guy I had liked for over a month had just started dating my roommate.

Ouch.

I remember sitting in my room alone. These moments were rare since I was in a triple that quarter. I sat there having a big pity party, convinced I was never going to meet anyone. The dream and plan I had devised at age 4 of finding “the one” in college was slowly crumbling away and I began to think there wasn’t anyone for me. I thought I was supposed to find someone by graduation, but that was a mere year and a half away. If I didn’t find him by then, would I find him at all?

I knew what my friends, my parents, and anyone else who heard this story would say.

“Why are you worried about that?”

“You’re so young!”

“No one even needs to get married before 25, anyway.”

“Why are you in such a rush?”

All of these were things I had already heard. I knew in my heart of hearts that this was not something I needed to worry about, but somehow, the worry always seemed to stay.

I remember just trying to feel peaceful. I knew I needed to stop the pity party. If I was supposed to find someone, I would.

But what if I didn’t?

What if I never dated anyone again?

What if I dated a lot, but it was obvious no one was for me?

What if…?

What iffff…?

What if…?

Clearly, my peaceful outlook was succeeding.

I began to try and distract myself. I opened up my computer and clicked around on iTunes. I noticed the “Recommended for You” tab had a new album in it. It was an artist I liked, so without listening to a single song, I clicked the “download” button. The first track that finished downloading was a promotional video of the album’s top song that had been out for a few weeks, and I clicked on it as soon as it would let me watch the whole thing. As it began to play and I listened to the words, my fear quickly and quietly washed away.

As the song ended, I sat there stunned. How could a song be exactly what I needed to hear at the exact time I needed to hear it?  

I realized how many times I had liked or dated someone when it was clear I was being lead somewhere else. As though someone were saying, “Nice try, but…no. I said no. Did you hear me? I said no! Not him! NOT him! NOT HIM!”

Perhaps I needed to listen a little more and stick to my own morals. It wasn’t really fair to me or the guys I was dating to try and shove a square into a circle, was it?

I’m pretty sure I played the song at least 4 times before I left the room. When I got back, I made a mix CD with my new favorite as the first song. I promptly put it in my car so I could listen to it when I was running errands, and I made sure it was loaded onto my iPod so I could listen to it while I was working out.

Shortly after, my dad came to visit, and he got to hear the song several times. After hearing it for the first time, he smiled and said, “Well, that’s certainly a good song for you.”


The song turned out to be incredibly true. I met my husband 10 months after the song came out. I remember calling my mom to tell her I had met HIM. “Okay, if you took every quality I’ve ever liked from every guy I’ve ever liked, rolled it all into one person and maximized it by 10, you’d have Jake.”

The following October, when Jake and I had been dating for a month and a half, my dad had come for his annual visit when the song came on the same mix CD I had originally made the year before. We were in mid-conversation, but we both stopped and listened to it. I looked over at my dad after it finished and grinned. “See?” my dad said as he blinked back tears, “I told you.”

Yes, Dad, you were right…as usual.

I thought about those moments as I got ready for work. Just after the song finished, my husband came into the bathroom, said good morning, and kissed me on the forehead.  

“Why are you looking at me like that?”
I grinned.

“Oh…nothing. I just love you.”