2. MOLT — Lyrics

Every change is good for me.

Click to Listen: MOLT
Loui Crow - streaming Feb 28

I molt with grace,
I molt with ease,
Every change is good for me.

(Scroll below the lyrics to read more about this song.)

Lyrics

[intro]
I live in a body that loves to renew.
Every cell knows what to do.
Change moves through me,
kindly and slow.
I welcome letting things go.
I am Molting

[verse]
Now—
slip the old fastening!
Feel the quiet work of becoming—
A strange itch.
Old feathers slipping.
New ones push in.
Molt says:
“Trust the chemistry.”
Change proceeds by necessity.
What sheds has served.
What emerges
has waited.
I feel the change and wish it well.

[chorus]
I molt with grace,
I molt with ease,
Every change is good for me.
Molt says: soften,
let it slide.
Feel feeds feather,
feather feeds flight.
Molt says: soften,
let it slide.

[bridge]
Pin-feathers rise—
Tender.
Alive.
Rest writes maps
for everything.
A whisper tells me
when to fly again.

[chorus]
I molt with grace,
I molt with ease,
Every change is good for me.
Molt says: soften,
let it slide.
Feel feeds feather,
feather feeds flight.
Molt says: soften,
let it slide.

[outro]
Stillness feeds the coming wing.
Old feather drifts with meaning.
A walker picks it up,
takes it home.
Every ending supports my molting.

About the Song

“Molt” is a body song.

How change actually happens when it isn’t pushed. The quiet kind. The kind that works underneath thought. Cells replacing themselves. Skin renewing. Breath adjusting without asking permission. The body already knows how to let go.

I’m learning to stop interrupting that process.

Louise Hay’s work sits right at the center of this track. Her teachings helped me understand that the body isn’t broken when it’s tired, tender, or shedding old patterns. It’s communicating. Repeating kindness. Asking for safety while it reorganizes.

A lot of her affirmations work the way molting works — gently, over time, through repetition. You don’t rip a layer off. You let it loosen. You speak to the body as if it’s listening, because it is.

“I molt with grace. I molt with ease.”
That line came directly from practicing that tone.

Not fixing. Not forcing. Letting.

What I Notice While Living With This Song

Change has texture.

It itches. It feels tender. It asks for rest. It slows things down. None of that means something is wrong. It means something is moving.

I’m still learning that stillness completes transformation. When the body is changing, it often asks for less movement, less decision, less urgency. Rest writes the map. Timing belongs to tissue.

Louise Hay wrote often about how healing responds to gentleness — how pressure delays release, and kindness invites it. That truth lives inside this song. Molt reminds me that feeling tired, sensitive, or quiet during change isn’t a setback. It’s the work.

Learning From Molting

Birds don’t molt all at once. They shed in sequence so they can keep functioning while they change. New feathers grow in before the old ones fully fall. Flight pauses or softens, then returns stronger.

During molting, birds often rest more. They eat differently. They stay close to cover. Their bodies direct energy inward, toward growth instead of display.

Crows molt too — often looking scruffy or uneven for a while. They don’t hide it. They don’t rush it. They let the process show.

That felt important to learn.

Molt teaches that change doesn’t require disappearance. I’m allowed to be visible while unfinished. I’m allowed to move slower while rebuilding. I’m allowed to look different while becoming.

Why Molt Sits Where It Does

Molt appears early in the album because softening comes right after witnessing.

Crow names what’s been carried. Molt teaches the body how to stay present with that truth without bracing. Release here happens through permission, not effort.

If Crow says, “This is what happened,”
Molt says, “You’re allowed to change now.”

I wrote this as a softer internal voice practicing itself out loud. Shared in case it helps someone else trust their own in-between a little more.

A little crow’s on the wire, keeping watch over you. 🪶

Loui Crow

I make music, practice mirror work, sometimes I do somatic rage fits, and small forms of magick that help me stay present and kind while things change.

I write songs for myself, my inner child, and for the woman I am becoming.
I work through old patterns, grief, and survival habits as I notice them loosening.

Sometimes I write as the Crow — that's my ideal self. Direct, unattached, protective, grounded in something older than my fear. Other voices come through too. The snake. The spider. The fly. The ghosts are the false selves I created to survive. I write as all of them, for my own self-hypnosis — unpacking who I've been so that my son can fill his days with joy and I can stop being such a reactive parent. I'm in the middle of it all. I just keep showing up.

I use Suno for vocals and instrumentals — the vocals are seeded from my own voice. I'm a disabled veteran and a stay-at-home mom.

Over the last year, I climbed an emotional ladder I didn't know I was on. Many of my earlier releases were the scream — my depression, anger, insecurity.

The last album that came out of that climb is called "Mirror, Mirror off the Wall." It starts with depression and ends with gratitude.

Much of what lives here carries the influence of Louise Hay and Abraham Hicks, especially the idea that my body listens to my thoughts — and that where I place my attention, my life follows.

I leave breadcrumbs in case anyone resonates.

Take what feeds you.
Leave the rest for the birds.

I am molting.
You are welcome here.

https://louicrow.com
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