When We Were in Love covers a wide range of topics. Most of the songs are love songs in which Mike Mains reminisces about falling in love with his wife and bandmate Shannon Mains. A few of the songs mention God and religion, but mostly in the way that a country song would. However, the most notable tracks on the album deal with Mike Mains’ battles with depression and his marital problems. The songs most explicitly dealing with those topics are “Breathing Underwater” and “Swamp.” Today’s song, “Around the Corner”thematically matches with “Breathing Underwater” and “Swamp,” though it doesn’t seem to be an “in the moment account” of a depressive episode. Instead, Mains is reflecting on his experience, and hoping to give hope to his listeners.
WITH HEAVEN’S MANSION OUT OF REACH. There are two sides to this song. Though I believe that ultimate message is one of hope, Mains doesn’t belittle the depressed experience. So often the clichés of acquaintances who just want us to stop bringing them down, only send us spiraling further. I often think of the quote from
August: Osage County: “ Thank God we can’t tell the future. We’d never get out of be able to get out of bed.” There’s so many times I’ve been paralyzed by the fear of what might happen, that fear caused me to miss opportunities to make my life better. Very rarely the worst case scenario happens. And when something bad does happen, it’s totally unexpected. I try to cling to a mantra my friend told me his therapist told him, “Don’t worry about things until they happen.” That stolen therapy session works, most of the time. We never really know what’s around the corner, and it’s actually a good thing. Would 2019 me live any differently knowing that a global pandemic was just around the corner? Other than investing in Zoom or home-delivery app stock, it’s probably better not knowing what’s next and just dealing with it as it happens.