Kitty's story, She was just herself.

Greetings and good morning to all my dear friends of this wonderful community and the hive in general. I hope you're having a wonderful Tuesday full of blessings. Today I want to bring you a new story. The truth is, I really enjoy creating them; as I've told you on other occasions, I believe each Rising Star card is a world unto itself, and there are many options for creating an interesting story. In today's story, I've chosen E74 Kitty. As you'll see, she faces several dilemmas about her life as a singer and music in general. I hope you like it. Let's begin!

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Kitty had a secret. Well, actually, it wasn't one of those secrets you hide in shame or fear, but rather a kind of internal thing she'd carried around since she was a child and had never quite known how to explain. One of those things you feel from a young age but don't know if others feel the same way. Music was her thing, yes, but not in a technical or ambitious way. It was just there, like a constant background. When she was little, she'd sit in the living room playing with her dolls, and in the background, her parents' vinyl records would play. The really old kind, with songs from the 60s, 70s, sometimes something from the 80s, or even 90s.

She didn't understand anything about styles or genres; she only knew that that noise, those voices, those choruses, that crunch at the start of the record gave her something, like a kind of strange hug. It was as if the house was filled with a different atmosphere when they played music, as if normal things became a little softer, or I don't know, that's just how she was. Over time, that didn't go away. At school, while everyone was talking about the latest reggaeton or pop or whatever was playing loudly at the moment, she would stay kind of silent.

It wasn't that she hated modern things, but she had a hard time connecting with them. Sometimes, while the living room speakers blasted a trendy beat, she would think about how different a bolero or an old ballad sounded. Sometimes it seemed to her that everything was getting too loud without saying anything. Of course, it wasn't easy. When she decided to study singing, more than one person questioned her. Some friends, even well-intentioned ones, told her she was focusing on a style no one wanted anymore.

That it was out of fashion. That if she wanted to make a living from it, she'd have to adapt. She, not very confident but rather stubborn, decided against it. If she was going to sing, she'd do it her way, with those songs that seemed straight out of another century, even if she had to explain a hundred times why she was doing it. She started out like many others: singing in small bars, in cafes where there was barely enough room to move and the acoustics were poor. In one of her first performances, I remember her sitting on the edge of the stage because there weren't even stools, and while people were finishing their beers, she began to sing with a somewhat shaky voice.

It was obvious she was nervous, but she hid it with a small smile that didn't quite convince anyone. At first, people looked at her strangely. A few people murmured things like, "Why does she sing such old songs?" or simply stopped paying attention after a few seconds. She tried to respond calmly when someone approached her later to tell her she should do more modern covers, but sometimes she didn't know what to say. She only knew that those old songs had always been with her, and she couldn't shake them off even if she tried.

Once, while singing something from the '70s, she forgot a part. Just like that. She went blank. The bar fell silent for a couple of awkward seconds, but instead of panicking, she giggled, apologized, and continued. It wasn't a great moment or anything heroic, but it was one of those moments where she learned that she didn't have to be perfect; that being authentic was enough to move forward. You know, her career didn't take off magically, far from it. It took months, maybe years, of rehearsals, concerts with small crowds, conversations with strangers who sometimes said nice things, other times things that hurt.

Once, in one of those dimly lit bars where commercial-hating types hung out, a guy approached her and said, "I've never heard anything like that before. It sounds like stories I didn't experience, but now I feel like I understand them." That lingered in her head for several days. Maybe weeks. Because sometimes you sing and you don't know if anyone else will understand what's behind those lyrics, so foreign yet so personal at the same time. She also had to fight with promoters who wanted her to "update a little." They wanted her to add a modern beat. They wanted her to change her look. They wanted her to use autotune, even a little. But it just didn't work. I mean, she tried it once, but she felt like she was disguised as someone else. As if the voice she'd been using since she was a child had been erased, that voice that wasn't perfect or very powerful, but that had a story behind it.

So yes, she made mistakes. Sometimes she was off-key, other times she forgot her pitch, or her voice trembled. But she also learned from that. She learned that in those small mistakes, there was something that made sense to her. Like when you tell a story and get the name wrong, and everyone laughs, but the story still comes through. One day, unexpectedly, she was invited to sing at a neighborhood event. Nothing big. A small venue, without spotlights or cameras. But it was packed. The crowd was all kinds: curious young people, nostalgic adults, neighbors who just came to hang out. That night Kitty wasn't as nervous as other times. She sang a ballad that reminded her of records from her childhood, and in the middle of the song, she heard someone say softly, "This reminds me of when I was a kid." It wasn't much, but it meant something to her.

There were no applause. No magical discoveries. Just a quiet but firm feeling that what she was doing made sense to someone else. Even if it was just one person a night. When she got home, she sat down to write a new song. She wasn't thinking about recording it or uploading it anywhere. Just writing it. Out of habit. Or out of necessity, I don't know. And as she wrote it, she realized that, even if the world changed and trends changed, she was going to keep singing those songs that no one asked for, because they were part of who she was.

Friend, as always, I'm very grateful for your visit to my blog. Thank you so much for reading today's story. See you soon in a new post. Until then, have a nice day.

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