Tag: Taylor Swift

  • Dancing Under the Spotlight: My Brutal Take on Taylor Swift’s New Album

    The Life of a Showgirl: When Performance Replaces Growth

    Back in 2008, when I was 11, I saw this music video of a soft-spoken, Barbie-looking girl singing about Romeo and Juliet. The song was Love Story by Taylor Swift — and I fell in love instantly.

    Then came Fearless. I listened to that album on my computer top to bottom. I had every song downloaded. My friends and I would sing You Belong With Me and songs from Red and 1989 in class like our lives depended on it. It was more than music — it was an era.

    Taylor wasn’t just a pop star to me. She was the narrator of every teenage emotion I didn’t have the words for. I grew up with her — heartbreak to heartbreak, album to album.

    But around 2020, something changed. Folklore was the last album that hit me right in the gut — poetic, mature, grounded. Evermore felt like her Folklore twin, Midnights was fine but forgettable, and then came The Tortured Poets Department… which I couldn’t finish without sighing. It felt like an artist trapped in her own reflection.

    And now, with The Life of a Showgirl, I gave it time — a full week, actually — to sit with it before making up my mind.

    Here’s the truth: as a lifelong Swiftie and a grown woman now, I’m not mad. I’m disappointed.

    This is my honest review — no hype, no stan goggles, just me, 28 years old, trying to figure out what the hell happened to the artist I once worshipped.

    1. The Fate of Ophelia

    The album opens with The Fate of Ophelia — a poetic nod to Shakespeare’s tragic heroine. Ophelia, destroyed by manipulation and madness, drowned in a river after being broken by the men around her.

    Taylor flips the story, singing about being saved from that same fate:

    > “No longer drowning and deceived
    All because you came for me”
    “You dug me out of my grave and
    Saved my heart from the fate of Ophelia”

    My Thoughts:

    I actually like this one — it’s one of the better tracks. But let’s be real: the symbolism doesn’t land. Ophelia’s story is about the cost of patriarchal control, not some man coming to the rescue. Turning that tragedy into a “he saved me” moment feels regressive. As a woman, I don’t need a man to drag me out of a river. I’ve got my own damn boat.

    2. Elizabeth Taylor

    When I saw this title, I was so excited. Elizabeth Taylor was the original showgirl — glamorous, messy, iconic. And Taylor’s teased that comparison before with her “Burton to this Taylor” line in Ready For It.

    This time, she takes it further, comparing herself to Liz and hinting at the chaos of loving under the spotlight.

    My Thoughts:

    I wanted a cinematic homage. What I got was a love song with Elizabeth Taylor’s name slapped on it. She sings,

    > “Elizabeth Taylor / Do you think it’s forever?”

    Girl. You named a song after the woman who got married eight times (cheated and got cheated on) The irony writes itself. The only real similarity is fame and flashing cameras — beyond that, it’s just Taylor being in love again, which is fine… but stop pretending it’s profound.

    3. Opalite

    This one’s clearly about her and Travis. Taylor’s even said Opalite represents “creating your own happiness” since it’s a man-made gem.

    > “I had a bad habit of missing lovers past
    My brother used to call it ‘Eating out of the trash’”

    My Thoughts:

    Catchy, yes. But also insecure. It sounds like she’s low-key comparing herself to her man’s exes and feeling not “his type.” I don’t want to diagnose her through lyrics, but this reads more “jealous girlfriend on Instagram” than “grown woman in love.” It’s uncomfortable.

    4. Father Figure

    This one seems to reference her early career — maybe even Scott Borchetta and the Big Machine fallout. It’s about power, control, and being “taken care of” by someone in charge.

    > “When I found you, you were young, wayward, lost in the cold
    This love is pure profit, just step into my office”

    My Thoughts:

    Good metaphor. Weird delivery. The whole “I can make deals with the devil because my dick’s bigger” line made me cringe. It’s meant to be satirical, but it comes off like bad fanfiction. I get what she’s trying to say — taking back power from men — but it’s written like a Tumblr post from 2012.

    5. Eldest Daughter

    She described this one as a song about the roles we play in public life — about sincerity and performance.

    > “I’m never gonna let you down
    I’m never gonna leave you out.”

    My Thoughts:

    As an eldest daughter myself, I expected to feel this one. I didn’t. The lyrics throw in Gen Z internet slang — “memes,” “terminal uniqueness,” “not a bad bitch, this isn’t savage.” Why? Taylor, you’re 35, not 19. I can’t with millennials.😭 This feels like someone’s mom trying to be relatable.

    6. Ruin The Friendship

    This track is straightforward — it’s about wishing you’d made a move on a friend before it was too late.

    > “Should’ve kissed you anyway
    And it was not convenient, no
    But your girlfriend was away”

    My Thoughts:

    Now this is the kind of Taylor I miss — emotional, confessional, messy in the best way. It’s nostalgic without being juvenile. Everyone’s had that moment where you think, “I should’ve said it when I had the chance.” Beautifully written, bittersweet, and honest. One of the best on the record.

    7. Actually Romantic

    Fans think this is Taylor’s response to Charli XCX’s Sympathy Is a Knife. The lyrics definitely have that energy:

    > “I heard you call me ‘Boring Barbie’ when the coke’s got you brave
    High-fived my ex and said you’re glad he ghosted me.”

    My Thoughts:

    At first, I hated it. Then it grew on me. It’s petty in a fun way — very Reputation-era energy — but the corny lyrics hold it back from being great. Still, I can’t lie, it’s a banger once you stop taking it seriously.

    8. Wi$h Li$t

    She opens by listing what everyone else wants — yachts, awards, fame — and then flips it with what she wants:

    > “I just want you
    Have a couple kids
    Got the whole block looking like you.”

    My Thoughts:

    I don’t know, honestly. It’s confusing. There was a time when Taylor pushed back against the “just a girl who dates” narrative—she made it clear she’s complex, capable, way more than a love interest. And now? She’s singing like she’s exactly the thing she spent years proving she wasn’t.

    For someone who’s spent her career talking about women, empowerment, and being multidimensional, this track feels like a step backward.

    There is nothing wrong in wanting to marry or have children. She’s allowed to want domestic life, sure. But don’t act like it’s revolutionary when it’s literally the same story she’s told since Speak Now.

    Hard pass. As a complex woman myself, I can’t vibe with this one.

    9. Wood

    Let’s not sugarcoat it: this song is about her boyfriend’s “wood.”

    > “Redwood tree, it ain’t hard to see
    His love was the key that opened my thighs.”

    My Thoughts:

    You have sex, okay. We get it.

    I wanted to disappear when I first heard it. It’s not sexy — it’s awkward.

    The wordplay isn’t clever, it’s cringey. Sabrina Carpenter can pull off cheeky and risqué because it’s her brand. Taylor can’t. It feels forced, like someone’s mom reading a Cosmo headline out loud.

    10. CANCELLED!

    A track about cancel culture — both personal and public.

    > “Did you girl-boss too close to the sun?
    Did they catch you having far too much fun?”

    My Thoughts:

    This one gave me Reputation flashbacks in the best way. The lyrics are still flimsy, but the production carries it. It’s messy, but at least it has a heartbeat. I’ll take this over the bland love songs any day.

    11. Honey

    > “You can call me honey if you want.”

    It’s a soft track about reclaiming affection — how pet names can mean something different when they come from love instead of condescension.

    My Thoughts:

    Cute. That’s it. Not great, not awful. It’s like filler on a decent playlist — fine in the background but nothing to replay.

    12. The Life of a Showgirl (ft. Sabrina Carpenter)

    This one’s cinematic. A fan idolizes a showgirl named Kitty, then becomes one herself.

    > “Hey, thank you for the lovely bouquet
    You’re sweeter than a peach
    But you don’t know the life of a showgirl, babe
    And you’re never, ever gonna.”

    My Thoughts:

    Finally — a song that feels alive. It’s self-aware, theatrical, and layered. Sabrina Carpenter’s feature adds the sparkle Taylor’s been missing. The lyrics capture what the whole album should’ve been: the cost of fame, the illusion of perfection, the loneliness behind the glitter. Easily the best song here.

    Favorites Ranked:

    1. The Life of a Showgirl

    2. Ruin the Friendship

    3. The Fate of Ophelia

    4. CANCELLED!

    5. Actually Romantic

    Final Thoughts: When Performance Becomes Prison

    Showgirls are supposed to be dazzling — bold, magnetic, impossible to look away from. But The Life of a Showgirl doesn’t shine. It flickers.

    This isn’t a terrible album. It’s a safe one. It’s Taylor refusing to evolve. The woman who once turned heartbreak into high art now writes like she’s still chasing the same high school crush.

    At 35, with everything she’s lived through — fame, power, reinvention — I expected something deeper. Something uncomfortable, maybe even ugly. But instead, we got repetition wrapped in rhinestones.

    Beyoncé at 35 made Lemonade. Madonna made True Blue. Michael Jackson at 37 made HIStory. Each of them grew up with their art. Taylor’s stuck in the act that made her famous.

    She’s mastered the performance but lost the hunger. And that’s the real tragedy of the showgirl — when your whole identity becomes the stage, you forget who you are once the lights go out.

    As someone who’s loved her since 2010, this hurts to say: she’s dancing beautifully, but she’s not moving forward.

    If this is the life of a showgirl, it’s one spent under endless spotlights — adored, applauded, but never truly free.

    Let me know your thoughts below 👇🏻💕


  • What have you been putting off doing? Why

    Ohh….. A lot of things. The first is my second book. I have 2 ideas about 2 books, I am unable to choose which one I want to proceed with for now. I also don’t know where I want to put those books on. So I don’t know how I feel about all of this. Inspite of the fact that I have ideas, I am still unable to put it to practice. So I am stuck here…..

    And the other thing is my poem book, again I have ideas for all the 20 poems, but because I also have a job, I am unable to start on this too. It’s like, I have the ideas, but I don’t know how to execute it. Am I the only one why feel like this? Or does anyone else also feels like it?

    I feel like I have absolute no purpose right now, and I’m stuck in a loop, I don’t know how to get out of. I havebeen listening to BTS Sabrina Carpenter and Taylor’s new album, and that’s all I am doing. Working and listening to BTS, Taylor and Sabrina.

    But I will surely start something this Saturday on my week off.

    WISH ME LUCK!! 🤞🏻💕


  • What would My life be like without music?

    Okay, let’s be real—can you even imagine a world without music? No headphones on the way to work, no songs to scream-sing in the shower, no background tracks to your best (or worst) moments. Honestly, I can’t. Without music, my life would feel so empty, like living in black and white instead of color. 🌑✨

    Music isn’t just sound—it’s therapy, it’s storytelling, it’s magic. Some days, the right song lifts me up like wings, and other days, it holds me when I just need to feel my feelings. It says the things I can’t say out loud.

    Take Taylor Swift—she’s basically my diary set to music. 📝💔 Every era, every mood, she’s got a song for it. BTS? Their music feels like a pep talk straight to the soul, reminding me to keep believing in myself. 💜 Ariana Grande makes me feel powerful and unstoppable with those insane vocals. The Weeknd? He sets a vibe like no one else—moody, intense, but addictive. Kendrick Lamar makes me think deeper, like his words echo long after the track ends. And Beyoncé… she is music, honestly. Pure power, pure grace. 👑✨

    And then, my heart belongs just as much to Arijit Singh and Shreya Ghoshal. Their songs? Instant goosebumps. 🥺🎤 They carry so much emotion, it feels like they’re singing straight to your soul. Hindi music has this way of making even the simplest feelings sound eternal.

    Without all this, I think life would be flat. Music turns tiny moments into big ones. That random night drive suddenly feels cinematic. That heartbreak feels survivable because someone out there turned the same pain into a melody. That celebration? Ten times better with a beat to dance to. 🥂💃

    So yeah… life without music? I don’t even want to think about it. It’s the heartbeat behind everything, the thing that makes ordinary days unforgettable. 🎧💫


  • Lullabies for the Heart: Nurturing Wellness Through Melody

    Music as Therapy: The Healing Power of Sound

    Ever since I was a child, I loved music. Even today I listen to music all the time, especially when traveling.Taylor Swift, BTS, Kendrick Lamar, Nicki Minaj, Arijit Singh, Beyoncé, Celine Dion, etc. are some of my favourite artits to listen too.

    The lyrics for me is what I look for when I listen to music. I want to connect to the artist by their lyrics. Over the years, I have listened to a lot of artist, and for me personally, the lyricism of R.M (Kim Namjoon), Suga (Min Yoongi), J Hope (Jung Ho-seok) and Taylor Swift have played a huge role in my life. Specially how I view myself and my life. It always feels like they are singing about my life to me.

    Music for me has always been about the stories.

    However, Music isn’t just entertainment—it’s a universal language that transcends barriers, speaks to the soul, and has a profound impact on our emotional and physical well-being. For centuries, people have turned to music in times of joy, sorrow, and healing. Today, music therapy has emerged as a recognized and powerful tool in healthcare and personal growth.

    But why is music so therapeutic?

    Let’s dive into the science and the emotional connection behind it.

    Listening to music activates multiple areas of the brain, including those responsible for emotions, memory, and motor control. Studies have shown that music can release dopamine, the “feel-good” hormone, which enhances mood and reduces stress. In fact, just listening to your favorite song can instantly uplift your spirits and calm your mind during tough or anxious situations.

    Music also impacts the brain’s limbic system, which processes emotions. This is why certain songs can trigger memories or feelings.

    Whether it’s the nostalgic tune of a childhood lullaby or an upbeat track that makes you want to dance, music has a unique ability to connect deeply with our inner world.

    Sometimes, words fail to express what we feel and it can be difficult to express onself. Music, however, can bridge that gap.

    A soothing melody or heartfelt lyrics can articulate emotions we struggle to put into words. It provides an outlet to process feelings like grief, anger, or joy, making it a therapeutic tool for emotional release.

    For people struggling with anxiety or depression, creating or listening to music offers a safe space to explore their emotions without judgment. It can act as a mirror, reflecting their internal struggles while simultaneously offering comfort.

    Life can be stressful, but music has the power to offer refuge. Slow, calming music—such as classical or instrumental—has been shown to lower heart rates, reduce cortisol levels (the stress hormone), and induce relaxation. Listening to calming music before bed can improve sleep quality, while upbeat music can energize and motivate us for the day ahead.

    Music therapy is particularly effective in helping people manage anxiety. Techniques like guided imagery with music allow individuals to visualize peaceful scenarios while listening to soothing tunes, helping them relax and reset.

    Music isn’t just good for the mind; it’s also a powerful tool for healing the body. In hospitals, music therapy is used to reduce pain perception, improve recovery times, and support physical rehabilitation. Rhythmic patterns in music can enhance motor skills, making it an effective tool for patients recovering from strokes or physical injuries.

    For individuals with chronic illnesses, listening to music can distract from pain and foster a sense of calm. The rhythmic patterns and harmonies can even help regulate breathing, heart rate, and blood pressure.

    Music has a way of bringing people together. Singing in a choir, attending a concert, or even sharing a playlist with a friend creates a sense of belonging and connection. For those feeling isolated or lonely, music offers a way to connect with others and feel part of something larger than themselves.

    Group music therapy sessions often promote social interaction, teamwork, and communication, which are crucial for mental health and personal growth.

    Music is a powerful tool for memory. It’s why you can remember the lyrics to a childhood song but not what you had for breakfast last week. For individuals with Alzheimer’s or dementia, music therapy has shown remarkable benefits in recalling memories and improving cognitive function.

    Familiar songs can stimulate the brain and evoke emotions, helping patients connect with their loved ones and surroundings.

    One of the most beautiful aspects of music therapy is its adaptability. Everyone’s relationship with music is unique. Some might find solace in the calming notes of a piano, while others might feel empowered by a rock anthem. Music therapy allows individuals to explore what resonates with them, creating a personalized healing journey.

    Music is more than a collection of sounds—it’s a powerful force that can heal, connect, and transform lives. Whether it’s through listening, creating, or simply experiencing, music has the ability to touch the deepest parts of our being and bring about positive change.

    So, the next time you feel overwhelmed, sad, or even joyful, let music be your guide. Put on a song that speaks to you, and let its therapeutic power work its magic. Because sometimes, all we need is a melody to remind us that healing is possible.

    What does music mean to you?

    Also who are some of your favourite artist to listen to?

    Let me know in the comments!