The Space Between
I spent thirty years in the corporate world. Good job, good pay, good at pretending the noise was normal. You wear the suit long enough and you forget there's a person underneath it. I told myself the hollow feeling would fill up eventually — that if I just kept going, kept producing, kept showing up, it would all click into place. It didn't.
Then, in February 2010, my father passed away. That phone call cracked everything wide open. All the walls I'd built, all the noise I'd used to drown out the questions I didn't want to ask — none of it held up against the weight of real loss. It was the beginning of a slow unraveling that took years to fully understand.
Eventually I found myself on a horse farm in Eastern New York — a homestead built in 1769, miles from the static. The glen became the place where I stopped running and started listening. Not to the noise, but to the silence underneath it. That's where the songs came from. Over 50 tracks poured out in a matter of weeks, like they'd been waiting behind a door I'd finally stopped blocking.
I didn't walk this road alone. Through the noise, the loss, and the long stretch of figuring out what comes next — Karry was there. She has been my anchor my entire life, keeping me grounded when the world tried to sweep me away. This project isn't just about my voice finding its way back. It's a testament to the one who stood by me while I cleared the static to find it.