Maren Morris is unable to Understand the ‘Profound Hatred’ against Meghan Markle
I don't understand why so many people, primarily women, detest and irritate...
Maren Morris 10th Anniversary of her move to Nashville
Maren Morris reminisced on her path since arriving in Music City to seek a singing career on Monday. She posted a vintage photo of herself and her mother standing next to a U-Haul truck as well as a more recent video of herself playing in front of a large crowd.
Morris, 32, wrote in the Instagram caption, “It’s a 10 year town. “I moved into a Craigslist apartment with two roommates I didn’t know and hurried to get into whatever writing room I could find ten years ago. I did this with a dream and a healthy dose of delusion. I’m still doing loops around this town ten years later.”
The Grammy-winning artist continued, “Today’s version of this dream is very different from the one I packed. There have been many miracles and more lessons than I ever wanted to learn, but it has a lovely patina that identifies it as mine. I wish I could hug my younger self and tell her, “Brace yourself, bitch. It’s going to be strange, but you’ll feel so proud of yourself.”
AdvertisementAdvertisementView this post on InstagramAdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement
Advertisement
Looking forward, she stated, “My bones tell me that the coming decade will look much more different. more content, free, and lived in. I’m eager to get to know her. Nashville, happy 10 years.”
Morris gained notoriety in 2016 with the release of her major label debut album Hero and the Grammy-winning song “My Church,” which served as the album’s first single. After her musical collaboration with Zedd and Grey, “The Middle,” reached at No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2018, she continued to have success.
She and her husband Ryan Hurd have been parents to 2-year-old son Hayes Andrew since they moved to Nashville ten years ago.
The multi-genre artist described last month what it was like to give birth to her baby in March 2020 as the world was coming to an end, to go through quarantine, and to battle postpartum depression.
The singer said, “I think a lot of identity issues happened there.
Morris clarified, “Not just being a first-time parent and mother, experiencing postpartum depression for the first time, suffering from it, and attempting to see the bigger picture. As well as simply recognizing my value without anyone applauding me.”
Morris says she wrote music to get through those emotions, both on her alone and with her spouse. She says she started off creating depressing songs before realizing she needed something joyful to get her out of the mood.
Catch all the Entertainment News, Hollywood News, Breaking News Event and Latest News Updates on The BOL News
Download The BOL News App to get the Daily News Update & Follow us on Google News.