Skip to content

Justin Calabrese

Entrepreneur, Author, Business Consultant, Digital Music Artist

Menu
  • Home
  • Books & Publications
  • Blog
  • Music
  • Photos
  • About Justin
  • Consulting
Menu

Why Writing Music Helps Me Cope With Life’s Woes

Posted on November 3, 2025November 3, 2025 by Justin Calabrese

There’s something about the quiet that always used to scare me — those long stretches of silence where your thoughts take center stage and the weight of everything you’re trying to ignore comes crashing through like a wave. For years, I didn’t quite know how to process what I was carrying: memories, trauma, anxiety, confusion, even faith. I tried journaling. I tried therapy. I tried pretending it didn’t exist. But nothing ever gave those feelings a voice until I found myself writing music.

Music, to me, is therapy in motion. It’s like cracking open a locked part of your soul and letting the truth spill out — messy, raw, and real. When I sit down to write lyrics, I’m not thinking about rhyming words or making a hit song. I’m trying to understand myself. I’m trying to speak in a language that makes sense of the pain and beauty wrapped up in being human.

Recently, with the release of my new album, Baptized in Regret, I’ve finally found a way to express the parts of my past that had no voice until now. Each track on that album is more than just music — it’s a story I lived, survived, and transformed into sound. The lyrics are mine, written from a place of deep reflection and emotion. And for the first time, I feel like I’ve truly said what needed to be said.

There’s power in sound. A rhythm, a chord progression, even a whisper of melody — it all becomes a mirror. It reflects where I’ve been and where I’m going. The studio becomes a sanctuary, the pen becomes a scalpel, and the beat becomes my breath. When life gets loud and unrelenting, I find peace in writing. It slows the world down. It gives me back control.

For me, songwriting isn’t just a creative outlet — it’s survival. I’ve lived through things that I’ve never fully spoken aloud, but somehow they’ve made their way into my music. The notes carry the weight of things I didn’t have the strength to say at the time. It’s strange — when you write a song, you don’t always realize how deep it cuts until you hear it back. And suddenly, it’s like someone else is singing your truth. That someone happens to be you.

Music doesn’t judge. It doesn’t try to fix you. It just listens. And in return, it lets you feel seen. That’s why it’s so therapeutic. That’s why I keep coming back to it. It doesn’t ask for perfection. It asks for honesty. And when you give it that, it becomes something bigger than yourself.

I think everyone deserves that kind of release — some form of self-expression that allows them to exhale. For me, that release comes in the form of melodies and lyrics. They’ve helped me grieve. They’ve helped me forgive. They’ve helped me rebuild.

So when people ask me why I write music, I tell them it’s because it saved me. And maybe, if I’m lucky, Baptized in Regret might help someone else feel a little less alone too.

Category: Lifestyle, Mental Health

Justin Calabrese

Justin Calabrese, MSM is an American entrepreneur, author, digital musical artist & creator, and small business consultant originally from Hartford, Connecticut. 

  • November 22, 2025 by Justin Calabrese What 150+ Businesses Taught Me About Entrepreneurship, Ego, and the Power of Being Teachable
  • November 22, 2025 by Justin Calabrese The Holidays, Through My Eyes: Why Family, Kindness, and Connection Matter Most
  • November 22, 2025 by Justin Calabrese Still Here: A Journey Through Healing and Self-Discovery
  • November 14, 2025 by Justin Calabrese Exploring the White House: A Personal Journey Through America’s Most Iconic Home
  • November 12, 2025 by Justin Calabrese Weekend in London: The Time We Chased Umbrellas at Stonehenge
© 2025 Justin Calabrese | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme