Reina Rae Country Repack Now

Hey y’all,

Take your boots off. Literally. Feel the ground. In the city, I find a patch of weeds in the parking lot. In the suburbs, I stand in the garden. This isn't woo-woo; it's physics. It slows your heart rate down from "panic" to "pedal steel." 2. The "Three Chords & A Truth" Rule In Nashville, they say the best country songs are three chords and the truth. I apply that to my to-do list. reina rae country

I love the stage. I love the roar of the crowd. But I’ll be the first to admit: And when you’re grinding for your dream (whether that’s a record deal, a promotion, or just keeping the farm afloat), the "city noise"—stress, comparison, burnout—tries to steal your song. Hey y’all, Take your boots off

Stay dusty, P.S. Drop a comment below with the one country song that pulls you out of a funk. Mine right now is "Cover Me Up" (Morgan Wallen’s version, don’t @ me). Let’s build a playlist together. In the city, I find a patch of weeds in the parking lot

In that hour, you are not allowed to "produce." You are only allowed to "be." Drive the back way home. Roll the windows down. Sing off-key. Call your mama.

If you’re reading this, chances are you’re a lot like me. You’ve got a little bit of gravel in your voice and a whole lot of dust on your boots, but your calendar is filled with back-to-back Zooms, traffic jams, and fluorescent lights.

So, how do we stay "Country Strong" when we’re miles away from the pasture? Here are three dirt-road truths that keep me grounded. You don’t need a ranch to touch grass. After a rough rehearsal or a tough meeting, I sit in my parked truck (or on my back porch steps) for exactly 10 minutes. No phone. No backup singer. Just me and the wind.