@@georgiak3606 well I’m talking the content of this specific song, I understand the whole deal with Ethel Cain in general, but I was wondering if there is something about this specific song or its message that is uniquely tied to religious trauma in some way.
@ReubenWalton sorry I was late replying but yes that was the point I was making. Relient K was a huge Christian band in the Christian sphere and as a deconstructing Christian it's somewhat healing to hear her sing this song and hear it when I am here in a different state of mind and freer I suppose. Ethel Cain's entire album was hard for me to listen to the first year it came out bc I related to a lot of the contents so much aside from being cannibalized 😂 being from the south and from a fundementalist conservative family but also surrounded by chaos. And I assume she herself has plenty of religious trauma especially as a gender non conforming queer person, I'm sure covering this was healing for her too. Thank you Ethel Cain!!!
@@ReubenWaltonI would also say from my perspective, listening to this song again is very much how my life as a Christian felt. I would give give give give but never hear anything back from God, never feel the safety and security they said He would bring me, and only feel guilt and shame about everything I did even as a child because God was watching. It felt like I was running myself ragged to make sure I didn't go to hell, and turned from things I loved and friends I loved, and ultimately turned on myself as a result. I have noticed a lot of Christian songs I listened to in my youth have become deconstruction songs to me now. I don't like that Flyleaf's front woman supports focus on the family and claims you can pray the gay away but "Fully Alive" is also a song that went from Christian in my mind (a lot of ppl didn't know that about flyleaf but I was Christian so it was a band I could listen to cause they said they were Christian lol) to a deconstruction so g when I got older, personally.clearly I cannot assume why she covered the song and I wasn't doing that before lol, but I think its a kinda if you know you know thing, and I think a lot of people with religious backgrounds and trauma relate to Ethel Cain's music and likely listened to Relient K in their Christian years.
I think about this cover daily.... I am blessed she covered it.
always comin back to this song
sounds fresh asf I need more songs like this one
this is incredible!
idgaf this is my favorite 2022 song
this is so good. thanks for saving this for us to hear! :)
here bc she took off soundcloud 💔
Yes yes Demons to some Angels to others!
I'll give till there's nothing left KZ
What guitar chords are thoseeeeee
PEOPLE DIED
Where
Whose here for the religious trauma ✌️😎
Is there a religious trauma aspect to this song?
@@ReubenWaltontypically yes when it involves Ethel Cain.
@@georgiak3606 well I’m talking the content of this specific song, I understand the whole deal with Ethel Cain in general, but I was wondering if there is something about this specific song or its message that is uniquely tied to religious trauma in some way.
@ReubenWalton sorry I was late replying but yes that was the point I was making. Relient K was a huge Christian band in the Christian sphere and as a deconstructing Christian it's somewhat healing to hear her sing this song and hear it when I am here in a different state of mind and freer I suppose. Ethel Cain's entire album was hard for me to listen to the first year it came out bc I related to a lot of the contents so much aside from being cannibalized 😂 being from the south and from a fundementalist conservative family but also surrounded by chaos. And I assume she herself has plenty of religious trauma especially as a gender non conforming queer person, I'm sure covering this was healing for her too. Thank you Ethel Cain!!!
@@ReubenWaltonI would also say from my perspective, listening to this song again is very much how my life as a Christian felt. I would give give give give but never hear anything back from God, never feel the safety and security they said He would bring me, and only feel guilt and shame about everything I did even as a child because God was watching. It felt like I was running myself ragged to make sure I didn't go to hell, and turned from things I loved and friends I loved, and ultimately turned on myself as a result. I have noticed a lot of Christian songs I listened to in my youth have become deconstruction songs to me now. I don't like that Flyleaf's front woman supports focus on the family and claims you can pray the gay away but "Fully Alive" is also a song that went from Christian in my mind (a lot of ppl didn't know that about flyleaf but I was Christian so it was a band I could listen to cause they said they were Christian lol) to a deconstruction so g when I got older, personally.clearly I cannot assume why she covered the song and I wasn't doing that before lol, but I think its a kinda if you know you know thing, and I think a lot of people with religious backgrounds and trauma relate to Ethel Cain's music and likely listened to Relient K in their Christian years.
Let me tell you a secret. Believing the name of The Most High is Righteousness unlocks Psalm 91.