Can't wait to see you win CMA Artist of the Year 😊 You will, Beautiful! You will! 💙
@dapoohbear7501 Жыл бұрын
I love this song! I heard it as an ad and started crying. You are amazing!
@MaRynnTaylor Жыл бұрын
Awe!!! 😭 thank you so much
@noluvmall Жыл бұрын
sent from a youtube ad and i loved the song i has to look it up ! ur amazing
@djthedj3238 Жыл бұрын
Hang on MaRynn. You are going for a music career'. New Talent on the Opry is always needed. Simple song, BUt between the way you address it and the lyrics, It homes to Millions. God Bless your Career
@raineterni2219 Жыл бұрын
this honestly made me cry
@MidnightStarz Жыл бұрын
This song really moved me 💖
@MaRynnTaylor Жыл бұрын
Awe🩷 thank you!!
@godslaya456311 ай бұрын
I love this song
@theloraks Жыл бұрын
Just found this song because it was an add on another video, you really caught my attention and I listened to every word. This really touched my heart tonight, and tbh it kinda reminded me of who I am. Thank you. Can't wait to hear more!
@MaRynnTaylor Жыл бұрын
This makes me so happy. 🩷 thank you for sharing this with me 🥹
@freckledmisery Жыл бұрын
hey there! I hope you prosper in your career!!! Loved this song ❤
@MaRynnTaylor Жыл бұрын
Thank you!!!
@captainnoob1575 Жыл бұрын
this song get into my recommendation. I LIKE IT 👍🏻
@LyricVidsOfficial Жыл бұрын
🔥🔥🔥
@ZebraGirl9711 ай бұрын
I want you to know that this is one of my favorite songs in my "healing" playlist and has helped me so much. Your song, alongside Try by Mandy Harvey and Last Hope by Paramore, has been helping me slowly heal a lot of old wounds. It resonates with me for different reasons than you wrote it for, I believe, but the lyrics are just so meaningful to me. Thank you for writing this. I'm 26, born in '97, but that's pretty close to '01. I don't have the talent you so clearly have for wording your feelings and experiences, and I ramble on too long, but I want to try to tell you how much your song means to me. I was diagnosed with a rare genetic disease at 21 and in the next 2 years, a long list of about a dozen secondary conditions caused by it, and by not being diagnosed for 2 decades. It nearly killed me, and in the thick of it there were times I honestly wished for that because I was so tired. I spent 2019-2022 in and out of hospitals, seeing a dozen specialists, having 10 surgeries in 2 years, intensive physical therapy to relearn how to be independent and get out of my wheelchair, learning about my conditions and trying dozens of treatments, and just trying to survive. As I'm sure you can guess, so much happened during that time. And the truth is, for at least 2.5-3 years of it, any energy I had was focused on just making it through the day and surviving. I finished my 4-year degree in 2019, because I only had two quarters left and I was so afraid that if I didn't finish it then I would never be well enough or able to go back, but I had to drop out of several programs I was in and didn't really get to spend most of my later years in University the way I wished I could. When you're writing your term papers from the hospital, it's not really the college experience you dream of. Finishing/graduating didn't feel like a victory or an accomplishment to be proud of, it just felt like a huge relief - like "thank God it's over" - because I was drowning between school and my health. All of this to say, when my health finally stabilized to where it is now and I had some time to think about things besides surviving, I came out the other side feeling completely lost. Not just lost about what to do, although that too, but about who I was and who I am now. Your early 20s are already a time of great change, most of us change a ton during that I think, but I didn't really have time to look at that change or process it or make decisions about how I would change, because I was just surviving. And so for the last year I think I've just been trying to figure out who I am, and really struggling with it. I think I just want to go back to the person I was before, even though I know that's not possible for a whole host of reasons. It's hard to move forward when you can't let go of what you had, I'm too disabled to work now. That doesn't mean I don't do many things that I enjoy and find meaningful, but I was a very driven and academically dedicated person and I wanted to continue my education and eventually work in medical research. And it feels like it all went down the drain, alongside a lot of my friendships and hobbies that I'm no longer either physical able to do or don't enjoy the same anymore because I'm just so different now. I know that not all changes are bad, but it's really hard not to see it as a bad one when it wasn't a change I had any choice in and when I didn't even have time to look at the changes happening until I was on the other side. In my mind there's this "before me" and "after me". There's "That girl I used to know", and there's me, and they are so distant from one another in my mind. The way you word it as almost a third person or a viewer from the outside looking at your past self is so accurate. I don't remember how that person felt anymore. It's weird because I want to be that person again but it also doesn't even feel like it was me. And I still don't really know how to reconcile the two and how to get back the parts of the old me that I can have still without all the things I can't have anymore, that go along with it, causing too much pain. The first time I heard your song, besides "that girl I used to know", the lyrics you wrote about not being afraid of anything and having a fire in your soul hit me like a ton of bricks. Because I think that is the core of what I want back. I'm missing the me that believed that if I gave all my energy and effort, there was nothing I couldn't do (hyperbole but you know what I mean). That I might not always succeed but I would always give my best. I was at the top of my class and running and writing my own research, managing clubs, working part-time, excited to go on to a postdoc and so motivated to keep pursuing my education and working in a field I loved and had passion for. I was completely unafraid to reach out and try things. I didn't doubt my own resolve or capabilities. And what I hate the most now is that the way my illness impacted my life has left me terrified to try anything. Even small things. I'm scared that if I join a choir, or volunteer in research, or take even a local community college class, that my health will fall apart and I'll have to lose it all again. So I don't try, and it makes me angry because it feels like weakness. I wish I remembered how to be fearless. Like I was worried about, this got way too long, but the gist is: while there's other songs that tackle the idea of change and the person you used to be, the way you described what I miss about the person I was is very powerful. I don't know how long it'll take me to heal, it feels kind of like I'm stumbling around in the dark to be honest, but your song gives me a lot of comfort and honestly I don't know that I would have been able to write all of this without having heard your song. Because it helped me identify how I feel, and why, and try to put into words what I've been running away from for over a year now, and look at it straight. Haven't been able to do that, and it's hard to work through something when you can't put it into words and won't acknowledge it. And I really couldn't figure out how to describe how I felt before. If you read all that, thanks. I spoke way too much about me, but I wanted you to know the music you're making is truly helping people. It helped, and is helping, me. And while I'm by no means an expert, I was originally pursuing a dual degree in classical vocal performance at my university before I got sick, and your voice, control, and tone are really beautiful. The melodies in this song and your intonation remind me a lot of older Carrie Underwood songs I grew up on. Please keep making music
@MaRynnTaylor11 ай бұрын
My friend you’ve been through so much.🤍 I’m so glad my song could be a light in your darkness. I think your younger self would be extremely proud of how strong you are and how much you’ve overcome. Thank you for sharing your story with me. I hope I get to be as strong as you someday!🤍
@keralytekid11 ай бұрын
@@MaRynnTaylor What an incredible response. You seem to be a beautiful soul.
@tiaandupreez Жыл бұрын
♥️♥️♥️🎉🕶️🔥🇿🇦
@VergelTorres14 Жыл бұрын
😢
@amal_3ka Жыл бұрын
💔 1:41
@emilyyang2229 Жыл бұрын
Is this song just called ‘01 ? I had the hardest time searching for it