spr;ng
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spr;ng is an exploration of grief, faith, beginnings, endings, and all the spring feels pressed in between the pages. It’s a hopeful and bittersweet goodbye to the first half of my 20s. It’s a reclamation of spring as a season of beauty and new life. It’s also a love letter to my friends, family, and the people who left with the cold.
For a few years, there were certain topics and events that I wasn’t able to write about because the pain was too fresh. What happened still makes me sad and angry but it’s shaped me so much that it felt dishonest to avoid writing about it.
Grief and loss isn’t a common topic in popular music. Not everyone experiences or prioritizes romantic love, but everyone in some shape or form experiences grief.
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The album is divided into three parts, each representing a different spring month (March, April, May). You can learn more about the song by clicking below.
I. March
1. More and More
2. Spring Snow
3. Kite Chasing
II. April
4. Allergy Season
5. Overcast
6. Come
III. May
7. Because of You, I Bloomed Again
8. Sweetea!
9. Bound by Time
meaning of ;
The album name is stylized as “spr;ng” because a semicolon is “used when an author could’ve chosen to end their sentence, but chose not to. The author is you and the sentence is your life” (Amy Bleuel).
Spr;ng documents my journey through grief and depression and how/why I chose to continue on. The semicolon reminds me that my story isn’t over yet. With every ending, there’s a new beginning.
Habakkuk is my favorite book in the Bible for multiple reasons. The prophet Habakkuk openly questions God, grieved over injustice, evil, and God’s seeming inactivity. The book doesn’t end with everything working out and justice actually happening. Yet somehow, Habakkuk ends up praising God and living by faith that God will somehow make what’s wrong right.
Though the fig tree should not blossom,
nor fruit be on the vines, the produce of the olive fail and the fields yield no food, the flock be cut off from the fold and there be no herd in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord;I will take joy in the God of my salvation.
God, the Lord, is my strength; he makes my feet like the deer's; he makes me tread on my high places.
To the choirmaster: with stringed instruments.
Habakkuk 3:17-19
I hope to have a fraction of Habakkuk’s faith, and so I took the last sentence of Habakkuk very seriously.
listen on spotify
listen on apple music
listen on youtube

about spr;ng
spr;ng is an exploration of grief, faith, beginnings, endings, and all the spring feels pressed in between the pages. It’s a hopeful and bittersweet goodbye to the first half of my 20s. It’s a reclamation of spring as a season of beauty and new life. It’s also a love letter to my friends, family, and the people who left with the cold.
For a few years, there were certain topics and events that I wasn’t able to write about because the pain was too fresh. What happened still makes me sad and angry but it’s shaped me so much that it felt dishonest to avoid writing about it.
Grief and loss isn’t a common topic in popular music. Not everyone experiences or prioritizes romantic love, but everyone in some shape or form experiences grief.

tracklist
The album is divided into three parts, each representing a different spring month (March, April, May). You can learn more about the song by clicking below.
I. March
1. More and More
2. Spring Snow
3. Kite Chasing
II. April
4. Allergy Season
5. Overcast
6. Come
III. May
7. Because of You, I Bloomed Again
8. Sweetea!
9. Bound by Time
meaning of ;
The album name is stylized as “spr;ng” because a semicolon is “used when an author could’ve chosen to end their sentence, but chose not to. The author is you and the sentence is your life” (Amy Bleuel).
Spr;ng documents my journey through grief and depression and how/why I chose to continue on. The semicolon reminds me that my story isn’t over yet. With every ending, there’s a new beginning.
Habakkuk is my favorite book in the Bible for multiple reasons. The prophet Habakkuk openly questions God, grieved over injustice, evil, and God’s seeming inactivity. The book doesn’t end with everything working out and justice actually happening. Yet somehow, Habakkuk ends up praising God and living by faith that God will somehow make what’s wrong right.
Though the fig tree should not blossom,
nor fruit be on the vines, the produce of the olive fail and the fields yield no food, the flock be cut off from the fold and there be no herd in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord;I will take joy in the God of my salvation.
God, the Lord, is my strength; he makes my feet like the deer's; he makes me tread on my high places.
To the choirmaster: with stringed instruments.
Habakkuk 3:17-19
I hope to have a fraction of Habakkuk’s faith, and so I took the last sentence of Habakkuk very seriously.