The Musings of Jaime David
The Musings of Jaime David
@jaimedavid.blog@jaimedavid.blog

The writings of some random dude on the internet

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Songbird: My Psalms — A Book I Stumbled Upon and Can’t Stop Thinking About

black and white photo of open poetry book

There is something uniquely disorienting about being an author. You spend so much time on the production side of literature, so focused on your own writing, your own releases, your own creative goals, that you sometimes forget you are also a reader. You forget that books are being born every day without your awareness, that entire collections of poems are floating out into the world while you are busy wrestling with your own sentences. That is exactly what happened when I stumbled upon Songbird: My Psalms. I didn’t go looking for it. It found me the way a lot of interesting things find me, through a moment of aimless discovery, a rabbit hole of clicking around and wandering through titles and descriptions until something stopped me cold and said, wait, look at this.

I want to be upfront about something before I go any further, because I think honesty is important when it comes to talking about books. I have not read Songbird: My Psalms yet. I have not cracked the cover, I have not sat with the poems, I have not let the language move through me the way poetry is supposed to. So this is not a review. It cannot be, because I have not done the work of actually reading it. What this is, instead, is something I find almost more interesting to write, which is the story of encountering a book before you have read it, of what a title and a description and a premise can do to your brain before a single poem has reached you personally. It is the anticipation, the curiosity, the specific sensation of a book lodging itself into your awareness and refusing to leave. And Songbird: My Psalms has absolutely done that to me.

So let me tell you about it. The collection is written by two authors, Danielle Emily and Emile Ignatius, and from everything I have been able to gather about it, the book is built around an intersection of themes that I find genuinely compelling. On the surface, the title tells you a lot. Songbird, a creature defined by its voice, by its instinct to sing regardless of whether anyone is listening. My Psalms, a deeply personal claiming of a form that is ancient and sacred and loaded with meaning. The Psalms, in the Biblical sense, are songs of the human soul directed outward toward something larger than the self. They are expressions of grief and gratitude, of despair and praise, of questioning and ultimate surrender. To call a poetry collection your psalms is to signal something important about how the poets are approaching their own inner lives, treating their words not as casual observations but as genuine spiritual offerings, as cries and declarations that carry the weight of something sacred.

The thematic territory of the collection is what really got me. From what I have come to understand about it, Songbird: My Psalms moves through themes of nature, healing, resilience, and a deep desire for peace and renewal. There is something in the book about the restorative power of the natural world, about how the landscapes around us can become mirrors for the landscapes inside us. There is also a significant thread running through it about neurodivergence, about the experience of feeling disconnected from a so-called consensus reality, about navigating a world that was not quite built for the way your mind works. The poets explore what it feels like to be misunderstood, to live with an interior life that does not map cleanly onto the expectations of the world around you, and to find within faith and within nature and within poetry itself a kind of dignity and validation that the outside world does not always offer.

That is a lot of ground for a poetry collection to cover, and yet it does not strike me as a collection that is trying too hard or overreaching. What draws me to it, even from a distance, is the sense that these are poems rooted in lived experience, in the specific textures of real emotional and spiritual struggle rather than abstraction. When poets write about healing, there is always a risk of the work becoming vague, of reaching for universality so aggressively that the poems lose all specificity and end up saying everything and nothing simultaneously. But the framing of Songbird: My Psalms suggests something more grounded than that. The psalms of the Bible were always specific even when they were universal. David crying out from the caves, from the wilderness, from the throne, was always writing from a particular body in a particular moment, and that particularity is what made the universality land so hard. A good poem about pain is always about one specific pain, and then, mysteriously, it is about everyone’s pain at once.

Now here is where I have to situate myself a bit, because I think my perspective on this book is shaped considerably by who I am and where I am in my life as a writer. My name is Jaime David, and over the past couple of years I have been on my own unexpected publishing journey. My debut novel, Wonderment Within Weirdness, was released on February 15th, 2025, a date that still feels surreal to me when I say it out loud. In the months that followed, I somehow also released a poetry compilation called My Powerful Poems and a short story collection called Some Small Short Stories, giving me three books out in a single year in a way that still occasionally makes me stop and stare at the wall in mild disbelief. Three books. One year. Me, a person who spent years writing without knowing if any of it would ever reach a reader.

The reason I bring my own story up is not to make this about me in any reductive sense. It is because I think where you stand as a writer shapes what you see when you encounter other writers’ work. When I stumbled upon Songbird: My Psalms, I was not just a random reader browsing a title. I was someone who had recently put his own poetry out into the world, someone who had recently grappled with the question of what his own poems were trying to say and to whom. My Powerful Poems is exactly what it sounds like, a collection of things I had been writing for years across notebooks and documents and blog posts, pulled together and given a spine and a cover and a chance to breathe as a single thing. Writing and assembling that collection taught me a great deal about what poetry actually is, or at least what it is for me. It is not performance. It is not decoration. It is the attempt to say the unsayable, to compress a feeling or a moment or a question into a shape that someone else can hold.

So when I encountered the description of Songbird: My Psalms, particularly the idea of poems exploring disconnection and resilience and spiritual healing through the lens of neurodivergence and nature and faith, it touched something specific. The subtitle alone, My Psalms, resonates with me on a level that I did not entirely expect. There is something honest and brave about that word my in that context. Not the psalms, not a collection of psalms, not psalms, but my psalms. Claiming an ancient sacred form as your own, insisting that your particular grief and your particular joy and your particular complicated relationship with the divine deserve to be spoken in that register. That kind of confidence, that kind of insistence on the validity of one’s own inner life, is something I deeply respect in any writer.

And the songbird imagery itself has been sitting with me since I first came across the title. A songbird does not sing because it has been trained to perform. It sings because singing is the expression of its nature, because silence would be a kind of death. There is something in that which cuts right to the heart of why any of us write, certainly why I write. Not for acclaim, not for success in any conventional sense, not because writing is professionally strategic or financially wise, but because something in the composition of my interior life requires the act of turning experience into language. If I do not write, something backs up inside me and goes sour. The songbird does not choose to sing. The singing is what it is. That is a true thing about poetry, and a title that captures that truth before you have even opened the first page is doing something right.

I want to talk about the timing of this book a little, because context matters when you discover a work. Songbird: My Psalms is a relatively recent collection, and the fact that it exists in this particular cultural moment feels significant to me. We are living through a period of intense and ongoing reckoning with mental health, with neurodivergence, with the question of how people who experience the world differently are seen and valued and heard. The conversation around things like being a highly sensitive person, around the experience of empaths, around the many ways a mind can diverge from the statistical norm and still carry profound insight and beauty, that conversation has become louder and more widespread than it perhaps ever has been. A poetry collection that plants itself right in the middle of that conversation and speaks from the inside of that experience rather than looking at it from the outside is exactly the kind of book this moment calls for.

There is also something about the pairing of nature and spirituality in this collection that feels important to name. The natural world has always been one of the primary languages through which human beings have tried to articulate the ineffable. The Psalms themselves are filled with landscape, with trees and rivers and mountains and the birds of the air. When the poets of Songbird: My Psalms turn to nature as a source of healing and as a vehicle for spiritual expression, they are participating in a lineage that goes back thousands of years, one that refuses to sever the connection between the outer world and the inner world, between the physical and the sacred. That refusal feels radical in a good way, in an era when technology and speed and abstraction have made it genuinely difficult for many people to access the natural world as a restorative force. A book that says slow down, look at this, let the light through these poems change something in you, is performing a kind of service that goes beyond entertainment or even art.

The fact that this is a collaborative work, written by two authors, also interests me. Poetry is such an intimate form, so deeply tied to the singular voice and singular consciousness of the writer, that collaboration introduces a fascinating complexity. How do two writers merge into something coherent enough to feel like one book, one collection, one vision? How do the seams hold? I am genuinely curious about how Danielle Emily and Emile Ignatius navigate that question throughout the collection, whether the poems feel unified or whether there is a pleasing tension between two distinct sensibilities sharing the same pages. These are questions I will only be able to answer once I actually sit down and read the thing, which brings me back to the central admission of this whole post.

I have not read it yet. I want to. That want is strong and specific and not going anywhere. There is a particular kind of book that gets into your mind before you have read it, that builds anticipation not through hype or marketing but through the sheer quality of the idea behind it, through the sense that whoever made this thing was working from a real place and trying to say something true. Songbird: My Psalms is one of those books for me. The title is good, the premise is good, the thematic territory is rich and relevant and alive, and the psalms framing suggests a depth of intention that I want to meet properly, with my full attention and an open reading mind, rather than skimming or rushing through it. Some books deserve to be read slowly. I suspect this is one of them.

What I can say with confidence, even before I have turned a single page, is that this book feels like it matters. It feels like it was made with care, by people who had something genuine to say and who chose the hardest, most compressed, most demanding form available to say it. Poetry is not the easy road. Any poet will tell you that. It is the form that accepts no filler, no padding, no hiding behind plot or character development or the forward momentum of story. Every word is load-bearing. Every line break is a choice that either works or it does not. To write an entire collection of poems about healing and neurodivergence and faith and nature and to title it after your psalms, your personal sacred songs, is to put your whole interior life on the table and say, here, this is what I found when I went looking inside myself, and I believe it is worth your time.

I believe it is worth my time too, and soon enough I plan to sit down and find out exactly how right my instincts are. Until then, the title sits in my mind like a piece of music I cannot quite remember but cannot stop trying to hear.

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