We’ve laughed. We’ve celebrated. We’ve eaten shepherd’s pie. And now? Now we get real.
“Irish in My Bones” is where the album slows down and gets honest. This is about what Irish heritage actually MEANS to me – not the jokes, not the stereotypes, but the real, complicated, beautiful truth.
The Story Behind “Irish in My Bones”
My father gave me stories wrapped in green. Thirty-three percent of my DNA comes from Ireland, but it feels like so much more than a number. It’s in the way I see the world. It’s in the way I love. It’s in the way I carry myself.
But here’s what I wanted to say with this song: we’re not the Irish you see on TV.
We’re not drunk. We’re not angry. We’re not stuck in tired, one-dimensional stereotypes. Yes, alcoholism runs on both sides of my family (we’ll get to that in the next song), and that’s part of the story. But it’s not the WHOLE story.
This song is me saying: Irish heritage is complex. It’s beautiful and it’s hard. It’s something I choose to carry forward, but I get to decide WHAT I carry forward.
The Lyrics
VERSE 1
My father gave me stories wrapped in green
Thirty-three percent of who I’ve always been
Not just a number, not just DNA
It’s in the way I see the world, the things I say
A thousand miles and generations wide
But I carry Ireland somewhere deep inside
CHORUS
It’s Irish in my bones, Irish in my blood
Passed down like a river, passed down like a flood
From my father to me, now to my own
These roots run deeper than I’ve ever known
It’s more than heritage, it’s home
Irish in my bones
VERSE 2
We’re not the Irish you see on TV screens
Not angry, not drunk, not stuck in tired scenes
Though alcoholism runs on both sides, it’s true
That’s part of the story we’re working through
My son came out with reddish in his hair
Green eyes reflecting something real and rare
VERSE 3
My siblings know it too, we share this thread
Connecting us to voices long since dead
We laugh the same, we love the same way through
Taking what’s good and leaving what’s not true
And now my children carry Ireland on
The real story, not the stereotype song
BRIDGE
Some things can’t be taught, they’re just known
The good and hard both carved in stone
Every March reminds me who I am
Part of something bigger than this span
I choose what travels, what moves on
Through my children to the dawn
The Weight of This Song
That second verse – “We’re not the Irish you see on TV screens” – that needed to be said. Because representation matters, even in a personal album about spring and transformation.
Irish people in media are often portrayed as caricatures: drunk, angry, simple. And yes, alcoholism IS part of my family story (stay tuned for track 9), but we’re not DEFINED by it. We’re complex. We’re real. We’re working through generational patterns while also celebrating what’s beautiful.
And that line “My son came out with reddish in his hair / Green eyes reflecting something real and rare” – that’s the moment I realized this heritage is ALIVE. It’s not just history. It’s right here in my son’s eyes, in his hair, in the way he carries himself.
The Power of Choice
The bridge is where this song’s true message lives: “I choose what travels, what moves on / Through my children to the dawn.”
Because that’s the thing about generational inheritance – YOU get to decide what you keep. You’re not a passive vessel. You’re an active curator of what gets passed down.
The alcoholism? I’m working through that. I’m not passing it on unchallenged. The storytelling? The love? The resilience? That’s coming with me. The stubbornness? (Okay, that one might be hardwired, but I’m trying.)
The Musical Shift
After the comedy and energy of tracks 6-7, this song needed to SLOW DOWN. It’s gentle, intimate, almost whispered. Fingerpicked acoustic guitar, soft fiddle, warm strings.
This is the quiet heart of the album. The moment where we stop performing and just… talk. Honestly.
The chorus swells with warmth but never overpowers. The verses are observant and tender. This is about connection, not spectacle.
What This Song Does for the Album
“Irish in My Bones” is the bridge between comedy and darkness. We’ve laughed at ourselves in tracks 6-7. Now we’re getting real. And this prepares us for track 9, which is going to HIT HARD.
This song says: heritage is complicated. It’s beautiful and it’s difficult. And we get to choose what we do with it.
To My Father
You gave me stories wrapped in green. You gave me 33% of my DNA and 100% of my understanding of what it means to carry Ireland forward with pride and honesty.
Thank you for the good. Thank you for being honest about the hard. Thank you for teaching me that I get to CHOOSE.
This song is for you.
โค๏ธ Melanie
