musician

Not This June

WAIT
Before you read this post, please listen to the song before I explain where it came from. It is raw, it is unfinished, it is real, each track is one-take, so turn your headphones up (the track might be quiet) and hopefully you enjoy this humble offering.

Hey y'all, Hannah here again.
I previously wrote a post called "Why Music?" and if you have not read that yet, please do, it explains a bit more of my heart behind music and why I personally create it. Here's the link, http://www.allthingsnewsisters.com/blog/2016/4/27/why-music

Here on All Things New we've been diving into pain, loss, grief, depression, and really just the trials of life and we've done that through the mediums of video and text/print but today we are going to continue on that journey with a different medium, music. For those of you who read my earlier post about music, you know that music is my therapy, my sanity, a guide that helps me hold onto hope, and helps me experience life in a more fulfilling way. When I write music I pull from experiences others have been through, I've been through, or prayers that turn into songs, or occasionally experiences directly from my imagination. That's what music is, an expression, a movement, an outcry of people who usually have few other ways of being able to communicate effectively or openly. This song I'm sharing with y'all today is no exception, it comes from a place of experience and sympathy. 

"Not This June" is an original that I (Hannah Porter) wrote in bits and pieces over the past few months as I have been dealing with new loss, old loss from over a decade ago, as well as watching grieving friends and family be hurt or frustrated with 'well-intentioned' but non-understanding comments and actions. In today's society, most everything is fast-paced and immediate and we expect everything around us to also be at the same pace. Oftentimes this bleeds into how we judge our own journey of healing as well as how we view others' paths of healing. We give them a handful of months to mourn and then we expect them to have moved on, because, after all, our lives have, so shouldn't theirs? Often this is unintentional but our own initial reaction rather than letting it be okay to not be 'there' (healed) yet. Think about it from the other perspective, maybe they just lost someone very close to or dear to them, or maybe they've been going through really hard situations, the cards of encouragement and meals were great for the first 3 weeks...then they started to taper off over the next 3 months and then stopped altogether. Their life just completely shifted, whatever happened to them means there is no "back to normal", it's only a different kind of life and 'normal' from here on out and they can't move forward from that in a year, let alone 3 months. 

The title comes from the reality that June and July, in particular, are pretty rough months for loss and anniversaries for myself and also for my family. I hope this song can encourage you where you're at, whatever you've been through or are going through. If you're anything like me, sometimes music helps me feel emotions I couldn't or wouldn't allow myself to feel on my own. May this also encourage you to have your eyes open to those around you who may be dealing with hard situations and how you, I, and we can represent hope and more importantly, be the living proof of a loving God to them, right where they are at. This song is not the end, it represents one leg of the journey on dealing with pain, loss, hurt, etc. We cannot stay in this space, but we cannot and should not ignore it either. We cannot tell others how they should grieve or when they should be done, but we can be there, we can listen, we can help bring hope for the future.
Please listen to the song again with this post in mind.

-Hannah

Why Music?

Hey Y’all, I’m Hannah Porter--the other sister on the All Things New Sisters Website. I know you’re used to hearing from Beth, but I’m going to share a little about something near and dear to my heart today!

Most aspects and areas of my life are focused on, involve, or ‘touch’ music in some way or another. I work for a radio station, I have been a worship leader for years and am currently one of the worship leaders at my church, I play/write/sing my own music, and I collaborate with others to achieve a similar goal. Let’s just say, music is everywhere in my life and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Music has this incredible ability to connect with and be relatable to one million people just as easily as it connects with and relates to one person. Not only that but music is widely and universally accessible for listening to or learning/playing. A kid in Ohio (USA) could be playing a piece of flamenco music on the guitar and instantly be transported to Latin America just as easily as someone in China listening to Frank Sinatra could be transported to ‘America’ (USA) and at that point, it doesn’t matter who they are, what their ‘status’ in society is, what race, gender, religious background, age, or how much money they make, music transcends borders and transports them. A mom driving in her car to pick up her kids from school could be having a really tough day and turns on the radio and a song comes on that gives her hope and she feels it speaks directly to her. Maybe that song was written from the perspective of finding hope after a bad breakup, but that mom felt it spoke directly to her in relation to having a hard time with her kids or friendships, etc. Or maybe someone is snowed in during the winter and they turn on some Jack Johnson or Michael Franti and are mentally transported to a warm beach somewhere, not a care in the world, just relaxing. See? Music transcends and transports. One song that I have written called “Why Use Me?” has received feedback from a lady going through cancer treatment saying it gave her hope, another guy said it helped him with self-esteem issues, one other woman said it touched her while she was going through a season of burnout. All different circumstances and people, one song.

Music for me personally is and always has been my therapy, my escape, and the truest form of my heart. I’m not an outwardly emotional person but I am very inwardly sentimental and therefore I’ve always said to people that if you want to know the truest forms of my heart, listen to my music. The rawest parts of who I am are in the details, from the melodies I play and sing, to the words I write, to the rhythm I choose. When I can’t express what is actually going on in my heart (which is most of the time) I put it in music, the good, bad, and the ugly. Music has helped me heal in ways mere words or other forms of therapy never could (but those do help too!).

It has influenced me deeply in many areas and aspects of my day and my life. I mean, one song timely played can either make my day and set my mood to ‘happy’ for the morning, or another song can bring back a flood of memories that could put me in a funk within a matter of moments and affect the rest of my day. I could listen to a song merely ‘for the beat’ and ‘not pay attention to the words’ and then weeks later I’m absently, quietly singing the words and melody to Justin Timberlake’s “Rock Your Body” in my cube at work and wondering why my cubemate is giving me such a confused look. Don’t get me wrong, I love me some JT, but my point here is that music is POWERFUL.

It has been the expression of millions, the voice and catalyst of movements throughout history, and now more than ever, a voice of cultures, people groups, and entire generations. In a society where people are more likely to get their news from Twitter, their visual entertainment from Netflix or Youtube, and their music from streaming rather than a physical copy, music gets either extremely overplayed and overhyped on every social media platform or doesn’t get the time of day at all. There are millions of voices out there right now and people are being bombarded from every direction, so, why this song? Why this artist? Why this album? Are you looking for the next catchy hook and chorus? A smooth jam? An emotional roller coaster? A political statement? A sermon? A masterpiece? Those and so much more are all in music. Choose your music wisely, whether you realize it right away or not, it has a deep impact on you, and for that matter, your kids. With that said, music is also an incredible vessel, teacher, comforter, friend, truth giver, and joy filler--so, enjoy the wonderful gift of music today!

If people only ever hear one original song from me, no matter how deep, sad, happy, random, or simple it may be, I want them to come away with feeling like what they listened to was honest, was possibly their own story, and always feeling the underlying message of HOPE. Music is influential, powerful, and moving; it can tear people down, or it can help and heal on the journey of making All Things New.


-Hannah Porter

Check out the "Media" tab/section of the website to hear some of Hannah's music.