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    Home - Discovering “Healthy” by Harrison Boe
    MUSIC - PLAY IT AGAIN!

    Discovering “Healthy” by Harrison Boe

    Alexandra NymanBy Alexandra NymanMay 18, 20254 Mins Read
    Harrison Boe Healthy
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    Photo Credit: https://www.harrisonboe.com/epk

    I Thought I Was Finally Healthy…

    It is rare for a song to feel like it is speaking explicitly to me, but a few days after my partner of the last ten and a half years decided to split up with me because he “don’t want to look at the next fifty years of [his] life and have them be defined by mental health,” I turned to Spotify for my cry session. That was where I discovered “Healthy” by Harrison Boe.

    Boe’s indie pop single “Healthy” doesn’t just document a mental health journey—it soundtracks the disorienting space between recovery and relapse with startling clarity. In an era where therapy speak floods timelines and healing is marketed as a lifestyle, Boe’s vulnerability lands like a gut punch precisely because it doesn’t pretend to be inspirational. Instead, “Healthy” is a quietly devastating meditation on the fragility of feeling okay—and how quickly that feeling can vanish.

    “I’m taking new meds, I’m clearing my head for the millionth time,” he opens, his voice light and almost conversational, masking the exhaustion in the repetition. The song is scaffolded by upbeat indie-pop rhythms and clean, melancholic production courtesy of Jonathan Beard, but Boe’s lyrics scrape at something raw. He isn’t singing from the mountaintop of recovery; he’s crawling from the crater, again.

    This deeply resonated with me because for the better part of a year, my ex had pointed out that I was depressed. However, I didn’t want to admit it. I’m a Recovery Coach, I know better. I wasn’t staying in bed for days or weeks on end, but I had no energy or interest in anything I liked to do. All I wanted to do was be on my phone. And yet, I insisted, “I’m healthy, I’m good.”

    But in reality, I was in denial. And it wasn’t until I lost the safety net of my relationship that I finally got my ass back into therapy and talked to my psychiatrist. I mean, like, really talked to them. Instead of the usual, “Yeah, I’m good.” I told them where I was and how I struggled to focus on my work. And like Boe, I was given a completely new medication regimen—something I have been completely resistant to.

    And yet, it was the best thing to happen to me. I have energy again and feel like I am in the land of the living. Like I was in the passenger seat, watching my life pass me by. And the embrace of my depression made me feel indifferent to that.

    When I heard the chorus—“I was finally healthy, finally good… how come my trauma had to get in the way?”—I felt seen. I have often shouted his weary plea to the universe, to himself, to his past, to the depths of my soul.

    There’s a Gen Z specificity to Boe’s songwriting, a sharp self-awareness of how performative healing can be (“my therapist said she’s happy to see me, but I think she lied”), and how dissonant it feels when the outer signs of progress don’t match the inner narrative. The song cycles through moments of hope and regression—sleep returning, then vanishing; laughter through tears—mirroring the nonlinear shape of mental recovery in a society that still rewards the illusion of having it all together.

    Boe, who once compared his obsession with Spotify charts to his childhood fixation with chess rankings, seems to understand now that validation can be a losing game. “Healthy” rejects tidy conclusions. Even its bridge, which finally dares to say “I’m finally healthy,” folds back into the refrain, the ghosts still circling.

    For listeners who’ve tried everything—medication, therapy, mindfulness apps, journaling, breathing exercises—only to find their ghosts still show up uninvited, “Healthy” isn’t just a song. It’s a mirror. It’s a late-night confession, the kind you make to no one and everyone. And in its repetition and weary poetry, it finds an unexpected kind of hope: not in being healed, but in being honest.

    “Healthy” has crossed one million streams on Spotify. Maybe because so many of us are tired of pretending we’re fine.


    Healthy | Harrison Boe | YouTube

    Healthy

    Healthy | Harrison Boe | Spotify


    The Music of Chess | Harrison Boe | TEDxGrandCanyonUniversity

    The Music of Chess | Harrison Boe | TEDxGrandCanyonUniversity

    Play it Again Sober Pop Culture Sober Musicians

    PLAY IT AGAIN is The Sober Curator’s curated playlist of sobriety anthems—songs that capture the essence of recovery journeys and lift the spirit. From timeless classics to modern hits, these tracks inspire, heal, and motivate, no matter what genre of choice. Each song is handpicked for its power to transport you to another state of mind and remind you why living alcohol-free rocks.

    Got a favorite sobriety theme song? We want to hear it! Send your picks to thesobercurator@gmail.com and help us keep the playlist growing.


    SOBER POP CULTURE + CELEBS at The Sober Curator is where mainstream trends meet the vibrant world of sobriety. We serve up a mix of movie, podcast, fashion, and book recommendations alongside alcohol-free cocktails, celebrity features, and pop culture buzz—all with a sober twist.

    We’re here to shatter the “sobriety is boring” myth with a mash-up of 80s neon, 90s hip-hop edge, early 2000s bling, and today’s hottest trends. From celebrity shoutouts to red-carpet style inspo, this is where sober is as chic as it is fun. To the celebs using their platform for good—our Sober Pop Trucker hats are off to you!

    recovery resources

    Recovery is hard 24/7, 365 – Please know that resources are available

    If you or someone you know is experiencing difficulties surrounding alcoholism, addiction, or mental illness, please reach out and ask for help. People everywhere can and want to help; you just have to know where to look. And continue to look until you find what works for you. Click here for a list of regional and national resources. If your life or someone else’s is in imminent danger, please call 911. If you are in crisis and need immediate help, please call: 988.

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    Alexandra Nyman
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    Alexandra Nyman is a fashion designer, marketing professional, and the founder of the Break Free Foundation. When she is not screaming at the top of her lungs, advocating for change, she can be found taking a million pictures of her cat and playing way too much Animal Crossing.

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