Foam

There’s a moment in life when you’re suddenly forced to become an adult. You’re not a teenager anymore; you’re someone who has to take care of yourself. For many, that moment resonates with college. You wonder whether everything will ever fall into place, whether life will ever make full sense. It’s within this mix of uncertainty and growth that Myra Keyes wrote Foam. You’re immersed in a completely different world, surrounded by people who seem to know exactly what they want. Around you, there’s commitment, constancy, and struggle. And, in a certain way, you are encouraged to do the same. Suddenly, classes get bigger, and people seem to follow their own path, overwhelming you with confusion. That pressure pushes you to fill your schedule with endless things to do, experiences you think might help you find yourself. You try to do it all, but end up tired and uncertain. Yet it’s exactly in those moments that you begin to understand what you truly aim for. Slowly, the pieces start to figure together. And like foam, everything becomes softer, wrapped by intention and calm. Myra Keyes, with her single Foam, captures this process perfectly. She knows firsthand what it means to pursue self-growth and identity, and her song frames in a unique way that journey into sound. With its rock energy and emotional depth, Foam becomes an anthem for anyone who has been told to trust the process:  keep going, even when the shape of things is still forming.

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Paradise