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Breathing Underwater by DeAnna Dailey
Breathing Underwater by DeAnna Dailey












It’s not a valiant proclamation of love for someone, but it is a form of love. There’s also a lyric, ‘I could call your demons inside, soak them in chamomile.’ That’s about the form of love where if you have a homie who’s upset or anxious or whatever, your love can be in the simple gesture of making them a cup of tea. I think people are like that too-you can meet people who are closed up or they’re cold, and sometimes all it takes is the littlest bit of affection and they can bloom and really open up. They captured it the moment it rained, and have footage of it unfurling-and that’s how it reproduces. They got footage of this Jericho rose that maybe hadn’t had water in 100 years. All it takes is for it to rain once and it blossoms in this crazy way. It can survive for over 100 years without water, without anything-it just survives by itself. It’s like a cactus, it looks like a tumbleweed, it lives in Africa, and it just kind of cruises around. I was watching a David Attenborough documentary about Jericho roses. Breathing Underwater (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) by Alex Flinn and a great selection of related books, art and collectibles available now at. The first verse is about a Jericho rose-it’s also called a resurrection plant. I wanted to write about the different forms of love that can exist.

Breathing Underwater by DeAnna Dailey Breathing Underwater by DeAnna Dailey

Love songs are beautiful, love is so universal, but the only representation it gets in a lot of songwriting is romantic love.














Breathing Underwater by DeAnna Dailey