Colorblind: Tender and Temporary
Counting Crows: Colorblind
I always know it’s coming. Not by the calendar or the app or the cramp in my lower back, but by the way everything suddenly starts to hurt differently. The laundry becomes a metaphor. The kitchen light feels too yellow. A memory I haven’t thought about in years flutters up and lands in my throat like a moth.
“I am covered in skin, no one gets to come in…”
The song plays low through the speaker, and I am immediately undone. Not in a grand, dramatic way. Just… quietly. Like a soft seam splitting open. Like a single string coming loose in a sweater that held me together all week.
Counting Crows always understood how to ache without asking for permission. Colorblind doesn’t explode it seeps. It’s the sound of feeling too much and saying too little. Of trying to hold yourself together with only your security blanket hoodie and the last spoonful of peanut butter.
And somehow, that’s where I live today.
In this flickering little moment where everything is just a little too much but also deeply beautiful in a way I can’t explain. The weight of memory and emotion and hormones and song and self pressing softly down on me, not to crush me—but maybe to remind me I’m still here.
There’s a kind of sacred absurdity to it crying over a sad song while the dishwasher hums and the dog stares at me like I’ve finally lost it. I haven’t. I’m just a little cracked open today. Maybe I needed to be.
It’s funny, in the smallest way. How the world doesn’t stop for your inner monologue. How you can be falling apart in the gentlest, most cinematic way possible and still get a “Mom will you bake me cookies” mid-spiral.
But that’s life, isn’t it?
Messy and magical. Boring and profound. Sometimes you feel like the main character in a soft indie film scored by Counting Crows, and sometimes you just need a nap or a cup of coffee and someone to tell you that you’re not crazy, you’re just alive.
That’s what this song does for me. That’s what this day is. Not a breakdown. Not a failure. Just a soft season. A swirl of color and fog. A reminder that even in the messy middle of feeling too much, there’s beauty worth noticing. Music worth hearing. Light worth holding onto.
There’s something strangely holy about this kind of feeling.
Not holy like a hymn but holy like breath fogging up a window. Like a quiet truth slipping out between sighs. Like being human and knowing it.
And tomorrow, I’ll probably laugh at myself.
Or forget how this even felt. Or wonder if I was being a little dramatic.
(Probably. Definitely. Who cares.)
Because today, this is where I am.
Under the weight of this song, this body, this heart that just keeps on feeling.
Covered in skin.
Soft and unraveled.
Colorblind—but seeing everything.
Tender and Temporary.
Searching For Stars







