Last updated: 16 hours ago
I started writing songs when I was 12.
Not because I thought I was a genius — but because talking to people felt like math without numbers. Writing was easier. Feeling too much was exhausting. And somehow, turning pain into lyrics gave it structure. Made it breathable.
I don’t sing. Never did.
My voice lives inside the words.
I write. I produce. I build the emotional architecture of a song like someone assembling a 10,000-piece puzzle without knowing what the final image should look like.
Yes, I use artificial intelligence.
No, it doesn’t write for me.
It helps me bring to life what I wouldn’t be able to on my own. It’s like hiring a very smart robot to help deliver a creative breakdown that started at 3AM during an existential crisis. AI handles the tech. I bring the storm.
Every lyric is mine.
Every line that sounds like a breakdown probably is.
I don’t write to impress — I write to survive.
My beats are mental maps. My lyrics are awkward confessions in poetic disguise.
I'm that kid in the back of the room who’d rather write an entire song than say "I'm sorry" out loud.
At the end of the day, that’s what I do:
I write to translate myself.
And if you feel seen in what I write…
Maybe we speak the same language —
Even if neither of us says a word.
Not because I thought I was a genius — but because talking to people felt like math without numbers. Writing was easier. Feeling too much was exhausting. And somehow, turning pain into lyrics gave it structure. Made it breathable.
I don’t sing. Never did.
My voice lives inside the words.
I write. I produce. I build the emotional architecture of a song like someone assembling a 10,000-piece puzzle without knowing what the final image should look like.
Yes, I use artificial intelligence.
No, it doesn’t write for me.
It helps me bring to life what I wouldn’t be able to on my own. It’s like hiring a very smart robot to help deliver a creative breakdown that started at 3AM during an existential crisis. AI handles the tech. I bring the storm.
Every lyric is mine.
Every line that sounds like a breakdown probably is.
I don’t write to impress — I write to survive.
My beats are mental maps. My lyrics are awkward confessions in poetic disguise.
I'm that kid in the back of the room who’d rather write an entire song than say "I'm sorry" out loud.
At the end of the day, that’s what I do:
I write to translate myself.
And if you feel seen in what I write…
Maybe we speak the same language —
Even if neither of us says a word.