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The Architecture of a Broken Mind: A Walk Through the Ruins

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  When I look at these images, I don't just see old stone and shattered statues. I see the inside of my chest. There is a specific kind of grief that happens when your mind is the thing that breaks. It doesn't shatter all at once like a window hit by a rock. It erodes. The walls crack slowly, the foundation shifts, and eventually, you find yourself standing in the middle of a ruin, wondering how everything got so quiet and so heavy. My book, I Wrote So I Would Not Fade , is essentially a map of these ruins. It is a walk through the broken rooms of a nervous system that was never allowed to feel safe. I want to share three moments from that map with you today. The First Room: The Origin of the Wound People think trauma begins with a loud crash. They think it announces itself. It doesn't. It creeps in through the foundation while you are still too young to understand what a foundation is. "Pain, when it arrives too early, does not introduce itself clearly. It comes as co...

I Wrote So I Would Not Fade: Taylor Swift, Trauma, and the Art of Surviving Through Words

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 There is a line in Taylor Swift's You're On Your Own, Kid that has followed me through years of darkness like a lantern refusing to go out. "Cause there were pages turned with the bridges burned. Everything you lose is a step you take." Some people hear a lyric. I hear a life. I hear the sound of a child learning that survival is often indistinguishable from loss. I hear the story of every person who has ever stood among the ruins of who they used to be and realized they must continue walking anyway. Perhaps that is why Taylor Swift's writing has always felt different to me. She does not merely describe events. She describes what events become after they settle into the body. The memory after the memory. The scar after the wound. The ghost after the leaving. For many listeners, her songs are stories. For me, they have often been maps. And when I began writing I Wrote So I Would Not Fade , I realized I had been carrying those maps for years. Not because I wanted ...

Codebreakers in the Dark: Why the Swiftie Fandom is a Masterclass in Empathy

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To the outside world, being a "Swiftie" is often reduced to a stereotype. They see stadium lights, friendship bracelets, and teenage girls screaming at a stage. They think it’s a pop phenomenon. They think it’s a trend. They are entirely wrong. From my small, quiet room in Lebanon—thousands of miles away from the epicenter of the Eras Tour—I want to talk about what this fandom actually is. I want to talk about why a 33-year-old man with severe PTSD, living in a collapsing economy, finds his safest refuge in the music of Taylor Swift, and more importantly, in the community she built. Being a Swiftie is not about liking a genre of music. It is an exercise in radical empathy. It is a masterclass in reading the subtext. Taylor Swift did not just create a fan base; she trained an entire generation to become codebreakers. She taught millions of people to stop listening to the loudest instrument in a song, and to start searching for the hidden track. She taught them to look for the ...