
Alone is a piece about the kind of solitude that doesn’t isolate, but steadies. It leans into the quiet truth that being alone and being lonely are not the same — that there is a kind of aloneness that feels like coming home to yourself.
Alone sits in the delicate space between comfort and disruption — the quiet joy of being by yourself, and the sudden rush of thoughts that can break that stillness without warning.
The piece moves gently at first, holding the warmth of solitude, before small ripples of tension surface, echoing how our inner world can shift in an instant.
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It’s a conversation between peace and interruption, between the desire to rest in your own company and the mind’s habit of wandering into noise. Alone doesn’t try to resolve that conflict; it simply lets both truths exist side by side — the calm, and the thoughts that crash in to disturb it.​
'Alone' is featured on Spotify's editorial playlist, 'Instrumental Reading.'
At its heart, the piece is a reminder that solitude is not the absence of thought, but the space in which we learn to meet ourselves with patience, even when the quiet is interrupted.
