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    <title>Peace15928gfdm</title>
    <link>https://posts.dduel.dev/peace15928gfdm/</link>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 05 May 2026 04:34:04 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title>When I wrote &#34;I Remember&#34;, it became more than a melody</title>
      <link>https://posts.dduel.dev/peace15928gfdm/when-i-wrote-i-remember-it-became-more-than-a-melody</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[As I was composing &#34;I Remember&#34;, it was never just a tune—it was a return to the parts of my past I still carry. The lines and rhythm transported me to the forest-farm of my childhood, and to the weight of those years.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;&#34;I Remember&#34; is a kind of time travel. Not just laughter and light, but the full landscape: the chaos and the calm. It captures the the love of my mother.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;The melody is a lifeline that ties me to my roots. And in singing it, I give breath to those who shaped me.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;That&#39;s why I became an artist. Not through some career ambition, but because the silence inside me needed form. Trauma, memory, identity—they needed space. And that&#39;s what sculpture became: a still, silent prayer.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;Sculpture taught me patience. Unlike words, form stays. I learned to shape pain, to take what was buried and place it where others could feel it. Each sculpture is a way of saying: I survived this, and I remember.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;My creative journey isn&#39;t about perfection. It&#39;s about connection. I switch between forms like the tides move—inevitable, rhythmic, necessary. When I can&#39;t carve, I sing. When I can&#39;t sing, I write. And when all I can do is breathe and be still—I listen. That, too, is art.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;There&#39;s a phrase that anchors me through it all:&#xD;&#xA;&#34;Because of you, I am; and because of me, you are.&#34;&#xD;&#xA;That&#39;s what &#34;I Remember&#34; means to me. It&#39;s not only mine—it&#39;s a whisper to those who walked before.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;When I sing it, I think of the quiet strength of my mother. I think of the hands that helped me up.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;I remember.&#xD;&#xA;And in doing so,&#xD;&#xA;I live.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;So when you hear the song, you&#39;re not just hearing me—you&#39;re hearing a whakapapa of survival. It&#39;s not performance—it&#39;s a return. A healing. A remembering.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;And that&#39;s what my art is always trying to do.&#xD;&#xA; a href=&#34;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iBzDKIyNxag&#34;Singer Songwriter/a ]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As I was composing <em>“I Remember”</em>, it was never just a tune—it was a return to the parts of my past I still carry. The lines and rhythm transported me to the forest-farm of my childhood, and to the weight of those years.</p>

<p><em>“I Remember”</em> is a kind of time travel. Not just laughter and light, but the full landscape: the chaos and the calm. It captures the the love of my mother.</p>

<p>The melody is a lifeline that ties me to my roots. And in singing it, I give breath to those who shaped me.</p>

<p>That&#39;s why I became an artist. Not through some career ambition, but because the silence inside me needed form. Trauma, memory, identity—they needed space. And that&#39;s what sculpture became: a still, silent prayer.</p>

<p>Sculpture taught me patience. Unlike words, form stays. I learned to shape pain, to take what was buried and place it where others could feel it. Each sculpture is a way of saying: <em>I survived this, and I remember</em>.</p>

<p>My creative journey isn&#39;t about perfection. It&#39;s about connection. I switch between forms like the tides move—inevitable, rhythmic, necessary. When I can&#39;t carve, I sing. When I can&#39;t sing, I write. And when all I can do is breathe and be still—I listen. That, too, is art.</p>

<p>There&#39;s a phrase that anchors me through it all:
<strong>“Because of you, I am; and because of me, you are.”</strong>
That&#39;s what <em>“I Remember”</em> means to me. It&#39;s not only mine—it&#39;s a whisper to those who walked before.</p>

<p>When I sing it, I think of the quiet strength of my mother. I think of the hands that helped me up.</p>

<p>I remember.
And in doing so,
I live.</p>

<p>So when you hear the song, you&#39;re not just hearing me—you&#39;re hearing a whakapapa of survival. It&#39;s not performance—it&#39;s a return. A healing. A remembering.</p>

<p>And that&#39;s what my art is always trying to do.
 <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iBzDKIyNxag" rel="nofollow">Singer Songwriter</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 30 Jun 2025 21:51:57 +0000</pubDate>
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