Hurricane: Storm Chasing Through Time

Lauren Nixon-Matney • June 25, 2025
Hurricane: Storm Chasing Through Time

Something Corporate: Hurricane

Some songs collide into you, electric and unstoppable, like a storm ripping through the quiet. Hurricane by Something Corporate has always felt that way to me—a surge of sound and feeling, a force too strong to ignore inspiring my body to be healed by the movement of dance. So I danced through youth, through heartbreak, through the kind of nights that made me feel infinite. And then life shifted, like storms do. The winds changed. The hurricane carried me somewhere new.


Stand up, don’t make a sound. Your ears might bleed.


That’s how it felt back then standing on the edge of something too big to name, the weight of youth pressing against my ribs, the pulse of the music keeping time with my heart. There were sweet fluorescent enemies that lived inside of me, restless thoughts that only seemed to quiet when I let the music drown them out. And Hurricane? It wasn’t just a song. It was permission to scream, to move, to let it all go.


The world moves faster than I knew…


This song has followed me through the years, shifting shape but never losing its urgency. It’s been a battle cry, a soundtrack to my youth, a reminder that movement is survival. And somehow, it became part of a new rhythm...the background melody of my son’s childhood.


Not fast enough to not creep up on you…


He began to play it often and on repeat at around four years old, humming along to lyrics he didn’t yet understand but somehow felt. Maybe that’s the magic of music the way it lingers, threading itself into our stories, carrying echoes of who we were while keeping us tethered to who we’ve become.


And the space we put between…


That space is vast, stretching across years, across lifetimes. But some songs collapse time, pulling past and present together until it’s all one infinite, spinning moment. Hurricane is that song for me. No matter how far I go, how much life changes, when it plays, I am caught in the current again singing, dancing, and feeling alive.


Because some storms never pass. They just find new ways to move through you.

Searching For Stars

By Lauren Nixon-Matney February 2, 2026
I don’t remember deciding to look in the mirror. I was already there, half awake, the house finally quiet in that fragile way it gets after a feeding. Same bathroom. Same light. A body that no longer belonged only to me, still learning its new outline. I tilted my head, not with panic, not even sadness just habit. Like checking a bruise you already know is there. Like waiting for an apology that isn’t coming. What annoyed me wasn’t what I saw. It was how quickly my brain tried to narrate it. The subtle inventory. The mental before and after photos. The unspoken timeline of when I was supposed to “feel like myself again.” I remember thinking, with a tired little laugh, Wow. I just made a human. And I’m still doing this. Still scanning. Still measuring. Still standing here as if my body hadn’t just done something borderline miraculous. And the most unsettling part wasn’t the criticism it was how normal it all felt. Like this was just part of motherhood. Like this quiet self surveillance was simply another thing you were supposed to carry. I didn’t necessarily feel it all at once. There was no dramatic breaking point. It was more like a quiet irritation that refused to go away. The kind that taps you on the shoulder while you’re trying to move on. I remember standing there thinking how strange it was that my body could do something as massive as bringing a whole person into the world and somehow still be treated like a problem to solve. How quickly the conversation had shifted from look what you did to okay, now fix it. I hadn’t failed at anything. And yet, the language in my head sounded like I had. That’s when something finally clicked not so much with anger or rage, but with clarity. This wasn’t intuition. This wasn’t health. This wasn’t even coming from me. It was inheritance. Passed down quietly. Polished to sound responsible. Framed as care. And once I saw that, I couldn’t unsee it. Katie this is where you enter the story… Someone who said the thing out loud that I had only felt in pieces. Someone who named the difference between discipline and disconnection. Between health and harm. Healthy Is the New Skinny didn’t tell me what to do with my body. It asked a better question altogether: What if the problem was never your body in the first place? That question rearranged everything. You gave me language where there had only been pressure. You replaced noise with permission. You handed me tools not commandments and trusted me enough to use them. And that trust mattered. Because the moment I stopped fighting my body, I started listening to it. And the moment I started listening, I realized how long it had been trying to take care of me. It felt like getting this beautiful window. Not to change myself or crawl through but to finally see clearly. I kept thinking about how these things actually get passed down. Not through lectures. Not through rules. But through the tiny stuff. The comments made in passing. The jokes you barely even realize are jokes. The way you talk to yourself when you think no one is listening. Especially kids. Especially daughters. It hit me one night, sitting on the edge of the bed, that someday they wouldn’t need me to explain any of this to them. They would just pick it up. The same way I did. The same way most of us did. Quietly. Without consent. That realization felt clarifying. Not heavy. Just honest. Some patterns don’t need a big exit. They just don’t get invited into the next room. And because of you, Katie, I found the strength to stop fighting myself. To stop trying to fit my body into some mold it was never meant to belong in the first place. To me, you are truly one of the most beautiful women and souls in this universe! Beautiful is the woman who breaks cycles. Beautiful is the voice that replaces shame with truth. Beautiful is someone whose work doesn’t just inspire it liberates. Thank you for changing how I live inside my body. Thank you for changing how I mother. Thank you for helping me choose health over punishment, presence over performance, and confidence that doesn’t ask permission. You saved me in ways you may never know. Thank you so much for opening the window. I’m raising the next generation with it wide open to limitless views of beauty! Lauren
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