Hey, there, it's Jonathan with this week's Good Life project riff.
So I wasn't actually planning on going here.
This isn't what I was planning on talking about today, but I feel like I can't not talk about it.
As I sit here and record this, there's an odd coincidence of this happening to be mental Health Awareness Month, which is in May and has been in the United States for a whole bunch of decades.
And a couple of days ago, we got the news that Chris Cornell was kind of the lead guy in the band called Soundgarden.
He was also this towering figure when I was coming up.
He was one of the big voices, the four octave range in the seattle grunge scene, when that kind of just exploded and took over the world of music.
And that was a time where I love music.
I always have.
And there was something about that whole scene, like Soundgarden, Nirvana, Pearl Jam.
There was something about that music that was so raw and so real, and it resonated so deeply, so profoundly with me, and that kind of defined a window of my life.
That was the soundtrack for a window of my life.
I can remember where I was when I heard certain songs.
I remember the first time I heard Chris taking the lead, singing black hole, son, just mind blown.
And so to hear that he took his life, which, and I guess those are the early reports, are that he took his life.
It was suicide.
I guess there's nothing definitive, but that's what, you know, has been out there in the news.
It really made me.
It made me pause.
Chris was also 52.